Everyone Told Me I’d ‘Always Be Taken Care Of’—Until One Sentence Proved Otherwise
nahoko
The office was quiet, save for the soft hum of the air conditioning. I sat across from a lawyer whose name I had only learned moments before. The envelope lay between us, a simple object that carried the weight of my family’s legacy. I reached for it cautiously, my fingers brushing against its smooth surface. The clock on the wall showed 3:00 PM, a reminder that time was moving regardless of my readiness.
« This is the final decision from the estate, » the attorney said, her voice even, devoid of sympathy or malice. It was business, pure and simple. I nodded, my expression unchanged, a practiced mask of composure.
The document inside was brief, but not sweet. « All assets to be transferred to primary beneficiary, » it read. The name listed was not mine. I had always been told I was the one to inherit. The words blurred for a moment as I processed the implication.
« There must be some mistake, » I said, my voice calm, almost detached. The attorney shook her head, not unkindly, but firmly.
« The will is clear, » she replied, her eyes meeting mine with a steady gaze. It was as if she had delivered such news countless times before.
I placed the document back in the envelope and stood. « Thank you, » I said, though I wasn’t sure for what. Perhaps for the finality of it, the clarity of where I now stood.
The hallway outside the office was long and lined with framed certificates. Each step echoed slightly, a reminder of the emptiness I felt. I needed answers. There would be calls to make, records to request, conversations to have. Someone had changed the narrative, and I intended to find out why.
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