“You manipulated a sick old woman.”
“She was my mother. Not yours. MINE.”
“Then where were you?” I asked calmly.
Tim paused. For a second something cracked behind his face, the same flicker I had seen in the coffee shop when he said he could not watch his mother. Then it hardened again.
“You manipulated a sick old woman. I have lawyers, Jeremy. Real ones. You’ll be lucky to keep your van.”
“I didn’t manipulate anyone. She knew.”
“Knew what?”
“Knew I wasn’t you. The whole time.”
Tim’s attorney filed to contest the bequest, claiming undue influence.
He laughed, ugly and short. “Tell that to a judge. See how that sounds coming from the man I paid $500 a week.”
The door slammed behind him so hard that a picture fell off the wall.
Within a week, the legal papers arrived. Tim’s attorney filed to contest the bequest, claiming undue influence. Then the phone calls started from relatives I had never met, calling me a fraud, a con man, and a vulture.
I sat on my mother’s couch that night, papers spread across the coffee table, and almost called the whole thing off.
“What are you going to do, baby?” she asked.
“I don’t know, Ma. He has money. I have nothing.”
“You have the truth.”
“She called you the boy who chose to stay.”
***
I drove to the nursing home the next morning. Margaret was in the sunroom, knitting something blue and crooked.
“Jeremy,” she said, patting the seat beside her. “I wondered when you’d come.”
“He’s suing me, Margaret. Tim. He says I tricked her.”
She set the knitting down.
“In her last week, Rosie told me about you every day. She called you the boy who chose to stay. Those were her words.”
“Would you say that in court?” I asked.
“I’ll say it anywhere they’ll let me.”
“Tomorrow you’ll have a settlement offer.”
That night I called a legal aid attorney, a tired woman named Denise who answered her phone at nine in the evening. I gathered everything. Visitor logs. Receipts for flowers and chocolates. Statements from three nurses and an aide.
Denise read it through at her kitchen table.
“Jeremy, I’ll take this. But I want you ready. They’re going to call you a predator on the stand. They’re going to bring up the money. Every dollar.”