Aunt Lucy didn’t reach for it.
“It goes into the estate account,” she said firmly. “You don’t get to buy your way out of this.”
Karen’s voice faltered. “If you want to go, go, Hazel. Or we can — maybe you and I could use a reset too. I don’t expect forgiveness. I just can’t be alone right now.”
Aunt Lucy stepped in, steady and calm. “Not here. Home. Then lawyers.”
I lifted my chin.
“Call your boss. Right now. Tell him the title is disputed, the sale is contested, and if that car moves again, the next call is to the police — and my attorney.”
Pete blinked once, then nodded. “Yes, ma’am.”
I turned to Karen. “You don’t get to hide behind ‘surviving spouse’ after what you just did.”
Aunt Lucy stepped forward, speaking loud enough for the remaining mourners drifting through the lot.
“Karen will sign whatever the lawyer puts in front of her. Today.”
Karen opened her mouth, but nothing came out.
Pete nodded, glancing nervously between us. “I’ll tell my boss the sale is frozen — and I’ll put it in writing.”
“I almost asked Dad for help last week,” I blurted, surprising even myself. “I was behind on rent. I kept putting it off. Now I never can.”
Karen met my gaze. Her mascara had run, making her look younger somehow… and lost. “We all wanted something from him. That’s the problem, isn’t it? We just kept taking.”
I nodded slowly, my throat tightening. Inside the envelope, behind the letter, was a small photograph—Dad and me in the garage, both laughing, grease smudged everywhere. On the back, in his jagged handwriting: “We don’t quit on things we love.”
Then I found the postscript — meant just for me.
“Hazel,
If you’re reading this, you’ve always been the best part of me.
Don’t let bitterness make you small. Keep your spine straight. Keep your heart generous. Love hard, even when it hurts.
Everything I leave behind will be split between you and Karen.
You were my reason to try.
—Dad.”
Those words hit harder than the funeral ever had.
Aunt Lucy’s arm wrapped around my shoulders. Karen’s sobs softened into quiet hiccups. Family members passing by squeezed my hand as they walked past.
As the sun slipped down behind the church roof, I closed my fist around the spare key. The Shelby wasn’t gone forever — just out of reach for now.
Aunt Lucy called out, “Home, Hazel. And Karen, your choices don’t get to steer this family anymore.”
I followed her, grief heavy in my chest — but something steadier underneath it.
Not forgiveness.
Control.
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