My Brother Flew Home From the Maldives Two Days After Grandma’s Funeral, Walked Into Her Kitchen, and Realized the Money He Wanted Was Already Out of Reach-luna

Evan stared at me like I had just changed the locks on his whole life.

For the first time since he walked in, he looked less angry than frightened.

Leah stopped pretending she was calm.

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Her hand slid from her tote strap to the back of the chair, gripping it hard enough to whiten her knuckles.

“What does that mean?” Evan asked.

His voice was still low, but the softness was gone. This was the voice he used when nobody was watching.

I did not move the envelope.

I did not touch the recipe box.

I let him sit with the sentence.

There is nothing wrong with the account.

I know you can’t access it.

Those two truths seemed to land in different places inside him.

The first confused him.

The second scared him.

Leah looked at him slowly. “Evan?”

He did not look back at her.

That told me something.

Until that moment, I thought Leah had come into Grandma’s kitchen as part of his plan.

Then I realized she might have come in believing his version of mine.

“Claire,” he said, “don’t play games.”

I almost smiled.

The word games felt ridiculous in that kitchen.

Grandma’s dish towel was still folded over the oven handle.

Her grocery list was still stuck to the fridge under a magnet from Yellowstone.

A half-empty jar of cinnamon sat by the stove because I had not had the strength to move it.

Nothing in that room had been staged for drama.

It was just where love had lived quietly for years.

And now money had walked in wearing a sunburn.

“I’m not playing anything,” I said.

Evan leaned back, then forward again, like his body could not decide whether to attack or retreat.

“You moved it,” he said.

“No,” I said.

His eyes narrowed.

“Then who did?”

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