He Removed His Mother From The Wedding List, Then Learned Her Name Was On Every Contract-iwachan

The paper trembled against Richard’s thumb.

Morning light hit the porch behind him, too clean and bright for what was happening. Somewhere inside his apartment, a coffee machine hissed. Susan’s bare feet made small sticky sounds against the hardwood as she stepped closer, and the faint chemical smell of her hairspray drifted through the open doorway.

Richard read the first paragraph twice.

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NOTICE OF TERMINATION OF OCCUPANCY.

He looked at the courier as if the man might apologize and take it back.

The courier only held out the receipt pad.

“Signature here, Mr. Parker.”

Richard signed because he had always signed whatever appeared in front of him when someone else had arranged the life around it.

That habit had finally found him.

By 9:04 a.m., my phone rang.

I was at my kitchen table with black coffee, Robert’s old reading glasses beside the folder, and my wedding pearls coiled in a small white bowl. I had slept four hours. My eyes burned. My dress hung over a chair in the laundry room, the hem still carrying a pale dusting of gravel from Green Valley Estate.

Richard’s name lit the screen.

I let it ring eleven times.

When I answered, he did not say hello.

“What is this?”

I stirred my coffee once, though I had not added sugar.

“A letter.”

“Don’t do that.” His voice dropped, the same careful tone from the wedding arch trying to find its footing again. “Don’t be dramatic.”

The spoon touched the side of the mug with a small click.

“Richard, I was removed from drama last night.”

Susan’s voice sharpened in the background. “Ask her about the cars.”

He covered the phone badly. I could still hear everything.

The cars were in the second section of Martin’s packet. The Tesla Model Y Richard drove to client lunches. The Range Rover Susan used for Pilates, charity luncheons, and arriving late to places where she wanted people to watch. Both were registered through accounts I controlled. Both had been provided for family convenience, not ownership.

Richard came back on the line breathing harder.

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