
PART 2 — THE TRUTH BEHIND THEIR “PRACTICAL SOLUTION”
The room went still again.
Chapter 2

PART 2 — THE TRUTH BEHIND THEIR “PRACTICAL SOLUTION”
The room went still again.
Lorraine whispered, “Brenda…”
But Brenda had gone too far to retreat gracefully.
She lifted her chin.
“That’s the truth, isn’t it? Trevor is your only child. Who else would inherit it?”
Trevor shut his eyes.
I studied my son’s face.
When he was seven, he had broken Edward’s favorite fishing rod and hidden beneath this same table because he believed his father would stop loving him. Edward had crawled underneath, lay beside him on the floor, and told him that love did not disappear because something valuable got broken.
Looking at Trevor now, I wondered what part of him was hiding again.
“Is that what you told her?” I asked.
Trevor opened his eyes.
“Mom—”
“Did you tell Brenda this house already belonged to you?”
“No.”
“Then why is she speaking as if I am merely keeping it warm?”
Brenda pushed her chair back.
“You’re twisting everything.”
“You brought a
measuring tape.”
“For furniture.”
“For rooms I did not offer you.”
“We came here because we thought you would care about your family.”
There it was.
The blade beneath the sweetness.
I leaned back and looked at all three of them.
“I care enough not to let you build your future on a lie.”
Trevor’s fork slipped from his fingers and struck the plate.
Brenda stared at me.
“What lie?”
Before I could answer, Lorraine began to cry.
Not loudly. Her shoulders folded inward, and a thin sound escaped her throat.
Brenda turned toward her. “Mom?”
Lorraine covered her mouth.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered.
Brenda’s face hardened. “Sorry for what?”
Lorraine looked at Trevor.
Then at me.
“I told her not to do this today.”
The air seemed to contract around us.
“Do what?” Brenda demanded.
Lorraine gripped the chair so tightly her knuckles whitened.
“To push you into moving
here.”
Brenda laughed once, but there was no humor in it.
“We discussed this together.”
“No,” Lorraine said. “You decided. You said it had to happen before the bank—”
Trevor stood so quickly his knee struck the underside of the table.
“Lorraine, stop.”
The old oak shuddered.
My coffee rippled in its cup.
Brenda’s expression changed.
Not completely. Just enough.
The polished mask slipped, and beneath it I saw raw desperation.
“Before the bank did what?” I asked.
No one answered.
I looked at Trevor.
He seemed suddenly younger than forty. Pale. Frightened. The boy beneath the table.
“Sit down,” I said.
He did.
Brenda remained standing.
“Tell me.”
Trevor rubbed both hands over his face.
“We got behind on the mortgage.”
“What mortgage?”
He looked at Brenda.
“Our house.”
I frowned. “You told me you were renting.”
“We refinanced two years ago,” he said. “Then Brenda’s business slowed down.
I lost the regional contract in January. We used credit cards for expenses. I thought I could fix it before anyone knew.”
“How much?”
He did not answer.
“How much, Trevor?”
“Two hundred and eighty thousand.”
Lorraine gasped, although she must have known some version of the truth.
My chest tightened.
Not because of the number alone, but because my son had sat at this table every Sunday, eaten my cake, accepted envelopes for the children’s birthdays, and never once said he was drowning.
Brenda folded her arms.
“We had a temporary setback.”
“Two hundred and eighty thousand dollars is not a setback.”
“We have assets.”
“You arrived here intending to claim mine.”
“We were going to sell our property, move in temporarily, pay down the debt, and take care of you.”
“Take care of me?”
“You’re almost seventy.”
“I am sixty-seven, not dying.”
She turned sharply toward Trevor. “Say something.”
He looked at me instead.
“I’m sorry.”
Brenda’s mouth fell open.
“I said say something useful.”
He stared at the cake, untouched except for the place where his fork had crushed the cream.
Then the front door opened.
Footsteps moved through the hallway.
Brenda spun around.
A woman entered the dining room carrying a leather folder. She was in her early fifties, with silver threaded through her dark hair and rain shining on the shoulders of her coat.
Brenda stared.
“Who are you?”
“This is Evelyn Shaw,” I said. “My attorney.”
Trevor looked as though the floor had tilted beneath him.
Evelyn gave me a small nod and placed the folder on the table.
Brenda’s eyes narrowed.
“You invited a lawyer to Sunday dinner?”
“I invited her for coffee at four.”
I glanced at the clock.
It was five minutes past.
Evelyn removed several documents from the folder and placed them in front of me.
Brenda’s voice sharpened. “What is this?”
“The reason,” I said, “that your assumptions were dangerous.”
Trevor whispered, “Mom, what did you do?”
I rested my palm on the papers.
“For the past six months, I have been working with a foundation that provides transitional housing for women over sixty who are facing eviction, financial abuse, or homelessness after the death of a spouse.”
Lorraine’s breath caught.
I looked at her.
“Women who have spent their lives caring for other people and discover, when they become inconvenient, that there is no safe place left for them.”
Brenda stared at me as if she had never seen me before.
“After Edward died, I nearly sold this house,” I continued. “It was too quiet. Every room sounded empty. But then I began volunteering at a shelter. I met women sleeping in cars because their children had taken their savings. Women moved from couch to couch because their pensions were not enough. Women who had signed away homes after being told it was best for the family.”
Trevor lowered his head.
“So I made a decision.”
Evelyn slid the first document across the table.
“This house no longer belongs to me.”
Brenda went completely still.
“What?”
“Three months ago, I transferred it into an irrevocable charitable trust.”
She stared at the document without touching it.
“The house will become a residence for six older women. The dining room will remain communal. The basement will be converted into two accessible bedrooms. I will live here for the rest of my life as the resident director.”
Brenda’s face drained of color.
“You gave away a house worth more than a million dollars?”
“I gave it a purpose.”
“You stole Trevor’s inheritance.”
Trevor looked up sharply.
“Brenda, stop.”
“No. She did this to punish us.”
“I did it before today.”
That silenced her.
Evelyn spoke calmly. “The transfer was completed in April. It cannot be reversed or sold by any beneficiary.”
Brenda’s lips parted, but no sound came out.
I turned toward Lorraine.
“There is one room not yet assigned.”
She looked at me through tears.
“The upstairs guest room,” I said. “The one with the morning light.”
Brenda’s head snapped toward me.
Lorraine blinked.
“I knew about the redevelopment notice,” I continued. “Lorraine called me three weeks ago.”
Brenda whispered, “You called her?”
Her mother nodded miserably.
“I didn’t know what else to do.”
“I offered Lorraine a room here,” I said. “Not because you demanded it. Because she asked honestly.”
For one suspended moment, relief softened Lorraine’s entire face. She pressed both hands to her heart.
“Oh, Renata.”
“She can stay for six months,” I said, “while Evelyn helps her apply for permanent housing.”
Lorraine began to sob.
I reached for her hand.
Then I added, “But there is a condition.”
Brenda’s relief vanished.
“What condition?”
“Lorraine comes alone.”
Brenda stepped backward as though I had struck her.
“You would separate a mother from her daughter?”
“No. I would give a mother somewhere safe to live without turning her into an excuse for her daughter’s financial collapse.”
“That is not what this is.”
Lorraine pulled her hand away from mine.
For a terrible second, I thought she had changed her mind.
Then she opened her handbag.
From inside, she removed a thick envelope sealed with a rubber band.
She placed it on the table in front of Brenda.
“I found these yesterday,” Lorraine said.
Brenda stared at the envelope.
“What are they?”
Lorraine’s voice shook.
“Letters from my bank.”
Trevor looked at Brenda.
The room seemed to hold its breath.
Lorraine slid the papers free.
“Three withdrawals. One for forty thousand dollars. One for twenty-five. One for eighteen.”
Brenda’s eyes flickered.
Lorraine’s voice broke.
“You took eighty-three thousand dollars from my retirement account.”
To be continued… Click “PART 3” to read the final part: 👉 PART 3 👈
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