I was sealing the last duffel in my defense office in Arlington, Virginia, when my phone lit up with a call from Thomas Grant, my family’s attorney who never called without reason. His voice was steady but carried weight as he said, “Lauren, I’m sorry, your Aunt Evelyn passed away last week.”
I sat down slowly, because Aunt Evelyn Harper had been the only relative who wrote to me during deployments and remembered every birthday without reminders. Then Thomas added, “She left you everything, the trust is secure, and it includes eighty million dollars and her riverfront house in Savannah, Georgia.”
I asked him to repeat the number twice, not because I doubted him, but because the reality felt heavy instead of exciting. My first reaction was not joy but a quiet sense of dread that settled in my chest.
My sister Brooke had spent most of our lives treating me like an opponent instead of family, and nothing about that history suggested this news would stay peaceful. I had followed structure all my life through scholarships, military service, and careful planning, while Brooke resisted rules, drifted between jobs, and blamed others whenever things fell apart.