Not Gerald. Gerald knocked twice, then called, “It’s me,” as if burglars often announced themselves politely.
Not Richard. He always texted first now.
Not Ruth. Ruth simply opened the door with the emergency key because she considered hesitation a waste of daylight.
I stood in the kitchen holding a mug of tea, my body already knowing what my mind had not accepted.
Trouble had a rhythm.
I set the mug down and looked through the peephole.
A man in a dark coat stood in the hallway, holding an envelope.
“Ms. Holly Crawford?” he called.
I did not open the door.
“Yes?”
“I have documents for you.”
The old Holly would have panicked and obeyed.
The new Holly said, “Leave them on the floor.”
He sighed. “I need confirmation of delivery.”
“You have confirmation. You spoke to me through the door.”
A pause.
Then the envelope slid down and landed on the mat.
His footsteps retreated.
I waited until I heard the elevator doors close, then opened my door.
The envelope was thick.
Cream-colored.
Expensive.
My mother had always believed bad news looked more respectable on heavy paper.
My hands went cold before I even saw the name of the law firm.
Inside were twenty-seven pages.
I read the first page standing in the doorway.
Then I sat on the floor because my knees stopped believing in me.
Eleanor Crawford was suing Gerald Maize.
Defamation.
Intentional infliction of emotional distress.
Alienation of family relationships.
Manipulation of a medically vulnerable adult.
She was also contesting Richard’s transfer of my stolen college fund, claiming that I had “coerced” him through “emotional blackmail” and that Gerald had “inserted himself into a family crisis for personal financial gain.”
For a long moment, I could not breathe.
Not because I believed any of it.
Because I recognized the shape of it.
This was my mother’s oldest talent: taking the wound she had made and wearing it like proof she had been attacked.
By the time Gerald arrived thirty minutes later, I had read the packet twice.
He found me at the kitchen table with the papers spread in front of me like evidence from a murder I had survived.
His face changed the second he saw them.
“What did she do?”
I pushed the first page toward him.
He read silently.
His jaw tightened, but he did not curse. Gerald rarely cursed. When something wounded him deeply, he became very still.
That stillness frightened me more than anger.
“She’s suing you,” I said.
“I see that.”