“It’s about what your father intended,” I said. “And right now, I need you to trust me.”

A long exhale crackled through the phone. “Fine. But call me back.”

“I will.”

When I ended the call, the knocking came again.

I walked to the front door, blue folder in hand, shoulders squared with a steadiness I did not feel. Then I opened it.

A young RCMP officer stood there, polite but alert, one hand resting near his belt. Beside him were the three Mitchell brothers, all dressed for the kind of conflict men conduct with paperwork and timing. Robert, silver at the temples and expensively composed. Allan, smoother, lawyerly, eyes quick. David, younger than the others by several years, handsome in a tired, slightly unfinished way.

“Mrs. Mitchell?” the officer said.

“Yes.”

“I’m Constable Wilson. These gentlemen have presented a court order requesting preliminary inspection of the property in connection with an estate dispute.”

Robert gave me a measured nod that managed to suggest civility and contempt at once. “This needn’t be unpleasant, Catherine.”

The use of my first name from a stranger nearly made me smile.

“Of course,” I said to the constable, and held out the blue folder. “Before anyone steps onto my property, I’d appreciate it if you reviewed these.”

The word my landed between us like a pin driven into wood.

Robert made a small dismissive gesture. “Family property disputes are often more complex than they appear. My sister-in-law is understandably emotional.”

I turned to him at last.

“Actually,” I said, “I’m neither emotional nor confused. I’m a widow standing on land that legally belongs to me while three men who never bothered to know me are trying to talk their way around that fact.”

The constable took the folder.

Something changed, very slightly, in his face as he began reading. He was young, but not foolish. His eyes moved quickly over seals, signatures, dates, notarizations. His expression lost its neutrality and acquired professional caution.

The brothers saw it too.

Robert’s posture shifted first. Allan’s jaw tightened. David looked away toward the pasture as if scenery might yet rescue him.

The wind rose across the porch, carrying the smell of dry grass and cold wood and distant earth. Somewhere behind the house, I thought I heard the low nicker of a horse.

For the first time since Joshua died, I felt something that was not exactly peace but came from the same family.