Through the window I saw the brothers conferring near the SUV. Allan, I guessed, was on his phone. Robert held a sheaf of papers under one arm. David kept looking toward the house in a way that suggested less confidence and more calculation.

Joshua went on.

“When I got the diagnosis, I knew I wanted to leave you something more than money. More than paperwork. More than absence. You always talked about land, Cat. Horses. Space. The kind of life where beauty had room to breathe. So I came back to the last place anyone would expect me to go.”

He smiled without warmth.

“The farm.”

The word itself seemed to cost him.

“I bought it from my father before he died. Legally. Quietly. He was nearly broke by then. Years of bad investments, drinking, stubbornness, and whatever else he called strategy. He sold it for a fraction of what it was worth because he thought it was ruined and because he believed he could keep that fact from my brothers.”

I stared at the screen. Every sentence rearranged another wall in my memory. Business trips. Late returns. The periods of distraction I had called stress. The new reserve in him those last three years, as if part of him were always somewhere else.

“It was in terrible condition when I got it,” he said. “Not just structurally. Spiritually. The place carried every bad thing I remembered from childhood. But I thought maybe that was why it was the right place to begin again. If I could turn that land into something beautiful, maybe I could leave you something untouched by the ugliness I came from.”

The front window flashed with movement. Robert was back on the porch. He held up a document toward the glass, tapping it with two fingers in a gesture designed to imply authority. Court order, maybe. Or something intended to look like one.

Joshua’s expression shifted. Hardened.

“My brothers will come for it,” he said. “They never wanted that property until oil was discovered nearby. Then suddenly family history became sacred.”

A humorless laugh escaped me. Even dead, he was still right on time.

“In the bottom drawer of this desk,” he continued, “there’s a blue folder. Every deed, transfer, bank record, survey, and notarized statement you’ll need. I made sure the title path was clean. The farm is yours. Entirely yours.”

Another vehicle appeared on the drive then, blue lights flickering across the afternoon. An RCMP cruiser.

My stomach dropped.