Renee was a fast connector of dots.
She came to my room on a Saturday morning. She did not knock first. I was at my small writing desk when the door opened.
And I will say this for Renee. She did not bother with a warm-up. She closed the door behind her, stood in the center of my room, and said, “You bought a house.”
I turned from my desk. I was wearing my reading glasses and the cardigan Daniel had given me for Christmas 3 years ago.
“I’ve been looking for a place,” I said.
“Yes. A 4-bedroom house on Whitmore Lane. Cash transaction through a trust called Eleanor Properties. Where did the money come from, Margaret?”
“I have savings,” I said.
“Daniel and I discussed your finances after Harold’s estate closed. You had enough to live on, not enough to buy a house in this market.”
I noticed she said Daniel and I discussed your finances as simply as you discussed the weather, as though my finances were a matter of household administration.
“Things change,” I said.
Her eyes narrowed. She was doing the math. I watched her do it.
“Did you inherit something? An account we didn’t know about?”
I took my reading glasses off and set them on the desk.
“Renee, is there a reason you feel entitled to an accounting of my personal finances?”
The temperature in the room dropped.
She was quiet for exactly the right amount of time.
The silence of someone recalibrating.
“Then we’ve supported you for 2 years, Margaret. We took you in when you had nowhere to go. I think we deserve some transparency.”
There it was.
Took you in.
I had been cooking their dinners and driving their children and making myself small in their home for 2 years. And the ledger in her mind read, We took her in.
“You have been very generous,” I said. My voice was steady. “And I am grateful. I’ll be out of your home within the month.”
I turned back to my desk.
She did not leave.
“If you’ve come into a significant amount of money,” she said, and now her voice had a harder edge, “Daniel is your son. He is your heir. He has a right to know. There are estate considerations. Tax implications.”
“I have an attorney and a financial adviser,” I said without turning around. “Both very competent.”
“Margaret,” her voice sharpened, “if you are hiding assets and something happens to you, it will create enormous legal complications for this family. For Daniel. You should think about that.”
I set down my pen.
“I have thought about everything very carefully,” I said. “Thank you.”
She left.
The door closed harder than she’d opened it.
I sat at my desk, and my hands were shaking. Not from fear exactly. From the effort of holding still when every part of me wanted to stand up and say all the things I had not said in 2 years.
Daniel came to my room that evening. He sat on the edge of the bed, the guest bed, the narrow bed in the room with the window that faced the fence, and he looked at his hands.
“Renee is upset,” he said.
“I noticed.”
“Mom…”
He looked up.
“Is there something going on that we should know about financially? I mean…” He paused. “I know I said some things at dinner that were… I could have put it better. I’m sorry about that. But this feels… Renee says you were evasive, and it’s making us worried.”
Leave a Comment