A torn journal page revealed my mother’s handwriting, the ink carrying desperate urgency that pierced directly through years of carefully preserved innocence.
“If anything happens, do not let them take Harper.”
Tears blurred the edges of paper as understanding unfolded violently, reshaping memory into something far deeper than absence alone. Theodore had carried this burden silently, shielding me from conflict that might have transformed childhood into contested territory.
Days later, Lorraine called with carefully measured sweetness that now sounded painfully artificial.
“Perhaps we could attend the will reading together,” she suggested lightly. “Family unity matters during difficult transitions.”
“You were never truly united with us,” I answered quietly, restraint anchoring my voice.
At the attorney’s office, Lorraine performed grief with impeccable precision, pearls arranged flawlessly, tears summoned only beneath observation. When proceedings concluded, I rose slowly, silence settling heavily across the room.
“You did not lose a sister when my mother died,” I stated calmly. “You lost control.”