That was when my father made his move.

It came on a Tuesday afternoon in the form of a call from an attorney named Collins whose voice had the polished neutrality of men who bill by the quarter hour and never speak a sentence unless they know exactly which part of it may later be quoted.

“Miss Anderson,” he said, “I represent James Anderson and Hannah Anderson. My clients have serious concerns regarding the circumstances under which Dorothy Anderson’s will was executed and her mental capacity at the time of signing. We are preparing a petition to contest the will and seek emergency review of the property’s current management.”

I stood in the office staring out the window at the lower meadow where three children from a guest family were chasing each other with pinecones.

“She was evaluated by her physician,” I said. “Mr. Thompson has the records.”

“That can all be explored in court.”

My hand tightened around the phone.

“Is this because business is going well?”

A tiny pause.

Then, smoothly, “This is because my clients want to honor Dorothy Anderson’s true intentions.”

I thanked him for the notice, hung up, and sat down before my knees decided for me.

I had always known it would come to this. Dorothy had known too. That was why the will was written the way it was. That was why she spent six months in Thompson’s office and why she insisted on the language about operational independence and the charitable transfer and the conditions on sale. But knowing something will happen is not the same as feeling your body recognize the exact moment inevitability begins.

I called Mark first.

Then Mr. Thompson.

Mark arrived that evening with takeout and legal pads. Thompson came the next morning with a banker’s box full of copies and a face so calm I understood instantly that he had been waiting for this in his own way too.

“She anticipated every version of this,” he said, setting the box on the dining table in the office. “James thinks force and confidence are the same thing as a case. They are not.”

He opened the box.

Inside were copies of medical evaluations, correspondence, notes from Dorothy’s meetings, and a sealed envelope labeled Video—Final Execution Day.

I stared at it.

“She asked to be recorded,” Thompson said. “She said if James ever claimed she didn’t know what she was doing, she wanted the record to look him dead in the eye.”

I laughed once through a sudden rush of tears.