Mr. Thompson cleared his throat, opened the leather portfolio before him, and began reading.

The first part of the will passed in a blur of formal language and small bequests. A donation to the local library that Dorothy always said would outlive every politician in the county. A gift to the volunteer fire department because “those boys saved my roof in the winter of ’09.” Her cookware to the neighbor who had checked on her during hard snow. A watch to one old friend, a quilt to another. Ten thousand dollars to the church youth program even though she argued with the pastor every Easter over flower arrangements. It all sounded exactly like her: precise, affectionate, practical, impossible to flatter into changing course.

Then Mr. Thompson reached the section that mattered, and the room changed temperature.

“Regarding the primary asset,” he read, his voice taking on a more formal cadence, “being the property known as Willow Creek Mountain Lodge, currently appraised at approximately one million three hundred sixty thousand dollars—”

The number landed in the room like dropped glass.