“I know.”
“And tomorrow you’ll have a settlement offer. I can already feel it coming.”
“Walk away now, or we will take everything you have and everything you will ever have.”
It came by noon. Tim’s attorney emailed a single line.
“Walk away now, or we will take everything you have and everything you will ever have.”
I read it twice, then I closed my laptop and thought of Rosie’s hand squeezing mine.
***
The probate courtroom felt smaller than I had imagined. Tim sat across the aisle in a pressed suit, his lawyer whispering in his ear.
When Tim took the stand, his voice trembled with practiced grief.
“He preyed on my mother. He saw a sick woman, and he took advantage of her.”
“She didn’t look like my mother anymore.”
My attorney stood slowly and handed a folder to the judge.
“Your Honor, these are bank records showing weekly $500 transfers from Mr. Tim to my client over a period of several months. We have also submitted text messages confirming that my client was hired to visit Mr. Tim’s mother while pretending to be him.”
For the first time all morning, Tim looked trapped.
Denise turned toward him.
“Mr. Tim, do you deny sending these payments?”
“And when was the last time you visited her yourself?”
Tim stared at the documents for several seconds.
“No.”
“And when was the last time you visited her yourself?”
The silence stretched long enough that the judge looked up from her notes.
“I couldn’t,” Tim finally said. “She didn’t look like my mother anymore.”
For a moment he was not a man in a pressed suit. He was a son who had run from the wrong thing and paid someone else to carry it.
The judge read Rosie’s letter in silence, then looked up.
Margaret testified next, small in the witness chair but steady.
“Rosie told me, clear as morning, that Jeremy was the boy who chose to stay. She knew exactly who he was.”
When I took the stand, I did not hide behind a story.
“I took the money,” I admitted. “I needed it for my mom’s medication. But I kept coming back. I couldn’t leave her like her own son.”
The judge read Rosie’s letter in silence, then looked up.
“The bequest stands.”