The words from the lawyer hit me like oxygen after being underwater too long. Jason had planned. Quietly. Carefully. While his mother was busy pretending to tolerate us, he had been protecting us the only way he knew how.
David explained it slowly, making sure I understood every word. Six months earlier, Jason had rewritten his will. Not because he was sick. Not because he was scared. But because he was tired of conflict and wanted certainty. He left the house entirely to me. Not shared. Not conditional. Fully mine. Eleanor was specifically excluded from any claim to the property, with a clause stating that she was never to reside there or interfere with my or the children’s residence. Jason had even added a notarized letter explaining why. He knew his mother. He didn’t trust her to respect his wishes.
David told me not to return to the house alone. He would handle it. By that afternoon, a police officer, a locksmith, and David himself were standing at my front door. Eleanor opened it with the same smug expression she’d worn the day before—until she saw the badge and the paperwork. Her face drained of color as the officer calmly explained that she had illegally evicted the legal homeowner and two minors. The locksmith changed the locks back while Eleanor stood frozen, clutching her purse like a lifeline.
David handed her the final document. A cease-and-desist. If she contacted us again, entered the property, or attempted retaliation, she would face immediate legal action. She tried to speak. No one listened. When she finally left, it was without a word.
That night, Ava wrapped herself in her pink blanket again. Noah slept in his own bed, one arm draped protectively over his pillow like he used to do when Jason tucked him in. I sat on the couch, surrounded by silence and grief, but for the first time since the funeral, I felt something else too. Stability. Safety. Jason was gone, but his love wasn’t. He had seen this coming. He had stood up for us even when he couldn’t be there anymore.
A week later, Eleanor tried to call. I didn’t answer. I didn’t need to. Jason had already said everything that mattered.
Love doesn’t end when someone is buried. Sometimes, it shows up strongest after they’re gone.