Three days after the funeral, Wesley called a family meeting in the formal dining room. He had invited several aunts and uncles, and he wore the smug look of a man who believed the finish line was finally in sight.

He slid a legal document across the table toward me. “It’s a Disclaimer of Interest,” he explained. “It just makes things easier for the real estate agent.”

“It’s very simple,” my mother added softly. “You sign this and formally give up any claim to the property so Wesley can resolve his obligations quickly.”

I looked at the paper and then looked her in the eye. “If I have no legal rights to this house, why do you need me to sign a disclaimer?”

Wesley’s face darkened instantly. “Because we don’t want some estranged daughter popping up in six months trying to claim a cut of the sale.”

I didn’t sign the paper. Instead, I left the house and drove into the city to meet with a man named Thomas Vance.

His office was located on the top floor of a historic brick building downtown, smelling of old leather and expensive stationery. He looked at me through gold-rimmed glasses with the patience of a man who had seen everything.

“I’ve been expecting your call for quite some time, Jada,” he said, leaning back in his chair. I placed the LLC document on his desk and asked him what it meant.

Vance looked at the paper and a small smile touched his lips. “The house on Brookside Lane is not actually part of your father’s personal estate,” he revealed.

I leaned forward, my heart racing. “What are you talking about?”

“In 2011, your father transferred the deed into Highland Properties LLC,” Vance explained. “The house belongs to the corporation, not to him or your mother.”

He lifted his gaze to mine and spoke the words that changed my life. “And you, Jada, are the sole owner of that corporation, and you have been for many years.”

The room went completely still as the weight of his words sank in. He explained that my father had come to him years ago, deeply worried about Wesley’s mounting gambling problems.

My father loved his son, but he didn’t trust him to protect the family assets. He believed that if he passed away, Wesley would eventually gamble away every single thing the family owned.

So he took the most valuable asset they had and placed it entirely out of reach. He didn’t do it for himself, he did it specifically for me.