Whitmore removed his glasses and polished them with infuriating calm.
“Regarding the Maple Street property,” he said, “there is a significant legal distinction. The property is not part of Mr. Henderson’s estate. It is owned by Farwell Family Holdings LLC.”
Marcus sat up so fast his chair nearly groaned.
“What the hell is that?”
“A company your father formed in 2009,” Whitmore said. “The transfer was properly recorded. Taxes and compliance fees were paid annually for fifteen years.”
Marcus swallowed once. Hard. “Fine. Then who owns the company? Mom?”
Whitmore turned his head and looked directly at me.
Every face in the room followed.
“The operating agreement names a single member with full control over the company and all its assets,” he said. “That person is Briana Henderson.”
The silence held for three full seconds before Marcus shot to his feet, red climbing violently up his neck.
“She manipulated him! She got to him when he was sick!”
“The paperwork was executed in 2009,” Whitmore replied, calm as winter. “Your father was fifty-three and in excellent health. It was witnessed by his accountant. It is entirely binding.”
Marcus grabbed the document with trembling hands, scanning it like anger might rearrange the words.
“This is fraud. This can’t be real.”
“It belongs to your sister,” Whitmore said.
My mother still hadn’t spoken. When she finally did, her voice was barely more than air. “He never told me. Twenty-five years, and he never told me.”
“He asked me to keep it confidential,” Whitmore answered. “I honored that request.”
Then she turned to me, and for the first time in my life I saw her look at me not as a burden, not as a guest, but as the person holding the keys to her survival.
“Briana,” she said, her voice breaking, “we need that money. Marcus owes dangerous people.”
The room erupted into whispers.
Aunt Dorothy clutched at her chest. Uncle Frank stared at Marcus like he was seeing him clearly for the first time. I looked at my brother and saw panic where entitlement had been.
“How much?” I asked.
No one answered.
So I answered for them.
“Three hundred and forty thousand?”
Marcus didn’t deny it.