When Grandpa moved into hospice care, she didn’t visit once, not even when the nurse called to say, “You should come now.”
I sat beside his bed every day, holding his hand while the machines hummed. He would squeeze my fingers and whisper things like, “You’re stronger than you think,” and I would nod because I couldn’t trust my voice.
Aunt Linda texted me once during that week.
“Keep me posted.”
That was it.
He passed away on a Tuesday at 5:12 a.m. I was there to say goodbye. I felt his hand go still in mine.
Linda showed up that afternoon.
She didn’t visit once.
I heard her before I saw her. The crunch of expensive tires on gravel. A car door shutting with authority.
I stepped onto the porch and watched her climb out of a shiny black Mercedes, oversized sunglasses covering half her face. Aunt Linda wore a white blazer as if she were headed to brunch, not her father’s house after his death.
She didn’t hug me.
She wasn’t there to mourn, but to inspect.
My aunt scanned the property.
I heard her before I saw her.
“Wow,” she said, pulling off her sunglasses. “It looks smaller than I remember.”
I folded my arms. “It’s the same size.”
She walked past me without asking and straight into the house.
My youngest, Noah, who is five, was sitting on the floor with his toy tractors. Aunt Linda barely glanced at him.
For the next three days before the funeral, she walked through every room like an appraiser.
She opened cabinets, tapped walls, and made notes on her phone.
“This can go,” she muttered in the dining room. “Nobody wants dark wood anymore; it’s outdated.”
“It’s the same size.”
In the barn, she wrinkled her nose. “The smell alone will scare off buyers.”
“Buyers?” I asked sharply.
Aunt Linda gave me a tight smile. “Katie, be realistic. This land is worth a fortune now. There’s lake access on the north end. Developers would fight over it.”
I felt something cold slide down my spine. “This is our home.”
She laughed softly, ignoring my kids as they played in the barn like they were tenants in her future lake house. “It was my dad’s home.”
“Developers would fight over it.”
On the night before the funeral, she cornered me in the kitchen while I was washing dishes.
“Let’s not drag this out,” she said, smiling like it was charity. “You have three days.”
I blinked. “Three days for what?”
“To pack up. I already have a developer lined up. Groundbreaking starts next week. It’s just business.”
Three days.
My mind raced. Every dollar I had went into keeping that farm afloat after the failed harvest. I didn’t have savings or family nearby. I didn’t even have a backup plan.
“You have three days.”
“You can’t just throw us out,” I said.
My aunt tilted her head. “I’m his only child. Once the will is read, it’s mine. I’m actually trying to give you a head start.”
My chest felt tight.
She walked away humming.
We remained civil during the funeral, but the real truth was about to come out.
***
The will reading was scheduled for two days after the funeral at Mr. Henderson’s office downtown. He had been Grandpa’s longtime lawyer.
“You can’t just throw us out.”
Aunt Linda arrived 10 minutes late, dressed in black but looking radiant, as if she’d already won. She sat across from me and slid a folded document onto the polished desk between us.
“Just getting the unpleasantness out of the way,” she said.
I unfolded it.
An eviction notice dated that morning.
My vision blurred.
Mr. Henderson didn’t even look at the paper. He calmly adjusted his glasses, folded his hands, looked at her, and said, “Actually, we won’t be discussing the property today.”
My vision blurred.
My aunt laughed out loud. “I’m his only child. It’s mine. Read it.”
The lawyer removed a stamped document from a manila folder and placed it carefully on the desk.
“Three days ago,” he said evenly, “your father didn’t own the farm anymore.”
The room went completely silent.
Aunt Linda’s smile faltered. “Excuse me?”
Mr. Henderson adjusted his glasses.
Then he said one sentence that made my aunt go pale.
“Your father didn’t own the farm anymore.”
“We’re here today because the farm now belongs to a protected family trust.”
The color drained from my aunt’s face.
She stared at him as if she’d misheard.
“A trust?” she repeated. “That’s ridiculous. Dad would’ve told me.”
Mr. Henderson remained calm. “Your father met with me several times over the past six months. He was very clear about his wishes.”
I felt my pulse pounding in my ears. Grandpa hadn’t said anything to me about this, not directly.
I’d seen his lawyer around, but the last week of his life had been about memories, not paperwork.
“Dad would’ve told me.”
Aunt Linda leaned forward. “He was medicated. He wasn’t thinking clearly.”
“He initiated the process before hospice began,” Mr. Henderson replied. “All documents were signed while he was of sound mind. The transfer was completed and recorded three days before his passing.”
The lawyer slid the stamped deed across the desk.
My aunt grabbed it and scanned the page. I watched the confidence drain from her face inch by inch.
“He wasn’t thinking clearly.”
“This says he transferred full ownership to a family trust,” Aunt Linda said slowly.
“Correct.”
“And who exactly controls this trust?” she demanded.
Mr. Henderson folded his hands again. “Your father named his youngest great-grandchild, Noah, as the sole trustee and lifetime resident of the property.”
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