My mother laughed again. A cabinet slammed. It sounded like they were making breakfast while announcing a death that never happened.
Grandpa didn’t interrupt.
He listened, jaw tight, one hand resting on the sealed envelope.
For months, he had quietly gathered bank statements after discovering large “loans” my father claimed were gifts. He revoked a power of attorney my father pressured him to sign after Grandma died. He scheduled a meeting with attorney Dana Harper to formally update everything.
He asked me to drive him because, as he put it, I was the only one who listened before speaking.
Inside that envelope were copies of his revised will, a written record of suspicious transfers, and instructions to contact Adult Protective Services if anything happened before the appointment.
That morning was supposed to be simple.
Breakfast.
Drive downtown.
Sign documents.
Instead, my parents were planning a funeral for a man sitting in my kitchen.
Then my father said, “If you contest this, you’ll lose. We have witnesses.”
The refrigerator hummed. The wall clock ticked. The spoon tapped Grandpa’s cup.
Grandpa leaned toward the phone.
“Richard?”
Silence.
Then panic.
“Dad? Where are you?”