I was 29 years old when my mother died, and by then, my life didn’t feel as if it belonged to me anymore.
For three years, my life revolved around her.
I scheduled doctor visits, fought with insurance companies, organized medications, and arranged hospice when the time came. I learned how to read her breathing the way other people read clocks.
For three years, my life revolved around her.
I slept on the couch because my bedroom was too far from hers, and I needed to hear her breathe at night. Every shallow inhale made my chest tighten. Every pause made me sit upright, heart racing.
Sometimes, in the dark, she would whisper, “Elena?”
“I am here, Mom,” I would say, already on my feet.
She hated how much I did for her. I could see it in her eyes.
“You shouldn’t be sleeping out here,” she told me once. “You need rest.”
“I am fine,” I said, like always.
“You need rest.”
Mom never argued. She just reached for my hand and held it longer than usual.
My 32-year-old brother, Mark, lived 40 minutes away. He said he “couldn’t get time off work.” He claimed things were hectic.
Over three years, he visited twice.
The first time, he stood in the doorway and frowned. “She looks worse than I thought.”
The second time, he checked his watch and sighed. “I can’t stay long.”
That time, he was around for only 20 minutes. I kid you not.
Over three years, he visited twice.
Mom watched him go without saying a word.
After that, she stopped asking when he would come again.
When she died, I thought the worst part would be the quiet.
I was wrong.
***
Two days after the funeral, my brother and I drove across town for the reading of Mom’s will. The lawyer’s office was small and smelled faintly of stale coffee.
I thought the worst part would be the quiet.
Mark sat across from me, relaxed, his leg bouncing as if this were an inconvenience instead of a funeral follow-up.
Thomas, the lawyer, adjusted his glasses and opened the folder in front of him. When the will was read, I wasn’t thinking about money. I just wanted proof that our mother saw me.
Thomas cleared his throat and read, “To my son, Mark, I leave the family home, including the land and all structures therein.”
Mark let out a long breath and leaned back, smiling. “Finally. That place is a goldmine!”
I stared at my hands.
“To my son, Mark, I leave the family home.”
“If we rezone it, I mean if I could rezone it,” Mark added, glancing at me, “I could double the value.”
Thomas didn’t even bother looking at Mark. He just continued, “And to my daughter, Elena, who has been my hands and my heart…”
My chest tightened. I sat up straighter.
“I leave my vintage sewing kit, including the machine and the glass jar of buttons kept on the mantle, along with the contents therein.”
“And to my daughter, Elena…”
Mark laughed. “You’re kidding! Right?”
Thomas shook his head.
That was it.
My brother got a house worth over $600,000, and I got a sewing machine and a dusty jar of buttons.
“Wow,” Mark said, shaking his head. “You always liked crafts, I guess.”
I didn’t say a word.
“You’re kidding! Right?”
Outside, Mark jingled his keys. “I’ll list the house on Monday. Want help loading your stuff into your car?”
“My stuff?”
“Yeah. Your craft junk.”
I was too exhausted to fight him.
I took the sewing machine, the kit, and the jar of buttons and drove home alone.
Mark jingled his keys.
That night, I sat on the floor of my apartment and held the jar in my lap.
“I don’t understand,” I whispered. “I was there.”
I felt flustered by the realization that I’d been taken advantage of by the one person I loved more than anyone else.
I was crying so hard that my hands shook. So, when I stood up abruptly to get some tissues and put the jar on a shelf, my hands slipped.
The jar shattered.
“I don’t understand.”
Buttons scattered across the floor, rolling under the couch and against the baseboards.
I let out a shaky laugh. “Perfect. This is exactly what I need right now.”
Then, as I was collecting the scattered buttons, I noticed something strange.
One button was heavier than the rest. It wasn’t made of plastic.
It was wrapped in Scotch tape.
My heart started pounding as I peeled it back with shaking fingers.
One button was heavier than the rest.
Inside was a tiny folded note. The first line stopped my heart.
“My dearest Elena. I know this looks like betrayal, but listen to me.”
My knees gave out, and I sank to the floor.
“I didn’t give Mark the house because I trusted him,” the letter continued. “I did it because he forced me to sign papers while I was medicated. It happened during the first visit, when he lied and told you I was craving seafood, and you went to buy it.”
The first line stopped my heart.
I pressed the paper to my chest.
I remembered thinking it was strange that Mom hadn’t mentioned the craving until Mark arrived. But I didn’t make a big deal of it at the time because my brother had always been Mom’s favorite. Or so I thought.
That day, Mom didn’t even eat the seafood, but Mark did. I had tried to brush the incident off until then.
The note continued, “He told me it was nothing important. I was too ill to argue. I also feared he’d make things harder.”
Tears blurred the ink.
I didn’t make a big deal of it.
“The jar isn’t an inheritance,” she wrote. “The note inside is proof. Proof I hid where he’d never look.”
I whispered, “You knew.”
“I knew you’d find it,” the letter said. “You were always clumsy whenever you got emotional. We were the same that way. So, I figured after the will reading, you’d be upset, and the jar would break.”
My heart was beating fast. I realized I needed to act quickly if I was to stop Mark from selling the house.
I hardly slept that night, trying to figure out what to do.
“The jar isn’t an inheritance.”
***
The following morning, I called the lawyer.
“There may have been coercion involved,” I said.
“That’s a serious accusation.”
“I know.”
“Well, in that case, I’ll need you and your brother to come back in today. Please bring whatever evidence you have that proves your allegations,” Thomas instructed.
I agreed, but little did I know the second meeting would nearly break me.
“That’s a serious accusation.”
Hours later, Mark arrived. To my surprise, Aunt Linda, my late father’s sister, came with him. Cousin Pete was also there. Thomas folded his hands and began.
“As I mentioned during our call, Elena believes the will was signed under duress.”
Mark scoffed. “She’s grieving.”
“Your mother was sharp as ever,” Aunt Linda said. “She joked with me the day she signed the will.”
I swallowed hard. “She was on morphine.”
“Elena believes the will was signed under duress.”
Mark leaned forward. “You are embarrassing yourself, little sis.”
The room felt as if it were closing in. I almost quit, but I wasn’t going to until the lawyer had reviewed Mom’s note. When I handed it to him, Thomas read it quietly, then sighed before passing it to Mark.
My brother laughed after reading it.
“Unfortunately, this note isn’t signed or dated and really proves nothing. There’s no guarantee that your late mother wrote it. Moreover, it comes off as if you’re just bitter and won’t accept your own mother’s decision,” Thomas explained.
“You are embarrassing yourself, little sis.”
I wished the ground would open up and swallow me whole right there and then!
The smug looks on Mark, my aunt, and my cousin’s faces made me want to puke.
There was nothing more I could do. The truth wasn’t enough.
Outside Thomas’s office, Mark turned to me and said, “Tick-tock. I hope you’ve cleared out all your belongings. Monday’s just around the corner.”
Linda and Pete laughed. They were clearly going to benefit from Mark’s plot.
The truth wasn’t enough.
That night, I started packing the buttons into a new jar, one by one, honoring my mom’s quiet defiance. I didn’t know what to do with them, but I knew I had to keep them as a reminder of what I’d lost.
That’s when I came across another Scotch tape button!
The note on it read, “Remember the sewing machine.”
I rushed to grab the sewing machine!
Hope filled my chest.
“Remember the sewing machine.”
When I lifted the sewing machine, something rattled inside.
“Mom,” I whispered. “What else did you hide?”
I made a silent prayer, hoping Mom had left something else and it would be a game-changer.
I managed to open a compartment I’d never noticed before.
Inside was a folded document.
It was the original will!
“What else did you hide?”
I quickly noted that it was dated weeks earlier and signed differently.
I wanted to shout in celebration, but was wary of getting my hopes up only for them to be dashed. So, I decided to handle the matter tentatively.
***
The next morning, I went straight to Thomas’s office with the will in hand.
I didn’t want to give Mark another chance to show up and humiliate me. I needed answers while I still dared to ask. Thomas stared at the new will in silence.
I needed answers.
“This predates the final will,” he said slowly. “This changes everything.”
“Do I have a case?” I asked, still holding my breath.
“Yes, yes, you do, Elena. I need to call your brother in, and he’ll need to bring his witnesses.”
After seeing the new will, Mark stood up, looking furious.
“This is ridiculous!”
“It isn’t,” Thomas replied.
“Do I have a case?”
The lawyer folded his hands and looked at Aunt Linda. “You said you were present when Margaret signed the will.”
“Yes,” Aunt Linda said quickly. “I was right there.” She hesitated. “Well, not the whole time. I stepped out to take a call.”
“How long were you gone?” Thomas asked.
“I don’t know. A few minutes.”
Mark crossed his arms. “It doesn’t matter.”
“I stepped out to take a call.”
“It does,” Thomas said calmly. “Linda, you testified earlier that Margaret was alert and conversational when you returned.”
“She was,” Aunt Linda insisted.
I swallowed and said, “You never came to visit my mom.”
Aunt Linda’s eyes flicked toward Mark. “I did, you were out.”
“I’d never leave Mom alone without a nurse, and how would you have gone in? Neither you nor Mark has a key.”
“You never came to visit my mom.”
“Margaret was on morphine by that point,” Thomas added. “She was at a dosage that medical records show causes confusion. However, the will Elena came with was signed long before Margaret was placed on morphine.”
“I’m not a doctor,” Aunt Linda snapped.
“No,” Thomas agreed. “But these things matter. You said she signed at 11 a.m.”
“Yes.”
Thomas turned a page. “The nurse’s log shows medication administered at 9:45.”
Aunt Linda’s mouth opened, then closed. “Well, I might be mistaken about the exact time.”
“Margaret was on morphine by that point.”
Mark leaned forward. “This is nitpicking.”
Thomas ignored him and turned to Cousin Pete. “You said you spoke with Margaret that same afternoon.”
Pete nodded. “She sounded fine.”
“On the phone?”
“Yes.”
“What time?”
“Um, around 2:00 p.m.”
Thomas glanced at me.
“She sounded fine.”
I said quietly, “She was unconscious from 1:30 p.m. until nearly 5 p.m. That’s how long she usually slept in the afternoon.”
Pete frowned. “That’s not what I remember.”
“So your entire account is based on a phone call that can’t be confirmed,” Thomas said, “and one you can’t place accurately in time.”
Pete shifted in his seat.
Mark’s voice rose. “You’re twisting this!”
“That’s not what I remember.”
Then Thomas slid the original will, the one I brought, across the table.
Aunt Linda stared at it. “I’ve never seen that.”
“Exactly,” Thomas said. “Because it was hidden.”
Pete cleared his throat. “I might’ve mixed up the days.”
Aunt Linda’s shoulders slumped. “It was a stressful time.”
Thomas met Mark’s eyes. “I’m obligated to follow the evidence.”
Mark looked at me, his face tight. “You planned this.”
I didn’t reply. His confidence evaporated.
Eventually, the ruling came down. The house was mine.
“I’ve never seen that.”
***
Weeks later, I stood alone in the living room where my mother had taken her last breath, the jar of buttons heavy in my hands.
“Thank you,” I said softly.
I realized that if I’d done nothing, Mark’s version of events would’ve won.
But because I pushed, his timeline collapsed, and I finally got what I deserved: to be seen by our mom.
“Thank you.”
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