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His Big Offer(16)

By:Penny Wylder


No, thank you. I spent a year after Mama died being heartbroken. I don't  need to relive that again, thank you very much. Besides, it took her  estate that whole year and an extra 8 months to even get this letter to  me. How important could it be?

But eventually, after a week of ignoring that half-opened letter on my  desk while I sorted through my current freelance projects, I ran out of  excuses. I couldn't prolong the inevitable anymore. I had to face the  music.

I unfolded the full letter over a hefty pour of Cabernet one Friday  night, with my favorite cheesy TV reality show on in the background, and  a long-overdue weekend off ahead of me. I figured that might mitigate  the blow, knowing that for once I had some free time to myself coming  up. I'd worked overtime for the last month and a half straight to carve  myself this little slice of freedom.

And this is how I decided to reward myself? I really am a masochist in disguise.

By the time I reach the third line of the letter, I've already downed my  whole glass of Cab. I need to refill to finish reading. Because this  one, I didn't see coming.

I didn't expect the middle block of text, written by my mother herself, years before her death.

I didn't expect the plea to resonate so deeply.

I didn't expect to feel it in my bones when I read her words on the  page, ink long-dried, words she asked her lawyer to add to this case  file long before the breast cancer stole her from me.

Sasha,

You are my only legacy. I don't say this because I'm ashamed of it-you  are the best thing that ever happened to me. My dearest dream in life  was to raise you right, and I am so proud of the woman you have become.

I know how much you love your life in the city, and I'm happy that  you've found your place. But I hope you recognize the history and  importance of our home back here, too. Your great-great grandfather  built this house with his own hands. For generations, your family has  tilled the soil, lived off what this land produced. I hope that when I  am gone, you will respect the legacy we've both been entrusted with and  do what is right for this place.

If you're reading this letter, it all belongs to you now, my love. I  trust you with it, as I trust you with everything in my life.

Your loving mother

She left it unsigned. That, somehow, makes it sting even worse.

I just keep rereading the words this place and our home. She means the  family farm back in Nowheresville. That place and I haven't been on  speaking terms for fifteen years. Not since I applied to the farthest  college away that would take me, packed up my bags and got the fuck out  of dodge.

I've spent the last fifteen years right here in New York City. I can't  imagine going back. Hell, I barely even visited, not until two years  ago, right at the end, when things were so bad Mama couldn't make it on a  plane out here. She visited me in the city as often as she liked  because I couldn't stand to visit her.                       
       
           



       

I visited that one time. The last time. I held her hand as she closed  her eyes and breathed her last. I barely stayed long enough to sign the  estate over to my more-than-capable legal team and then I high-tailed it  out of dodge.

I never thought I'd need to go back. I never planned to set foot in that tiny town ever again.

But here are her words, staring up at me in black-and-white, asking the impossible. Asking me to return.

I can't, is my immediate gut reaction.

You have to, is what my frontal cortex yells at my monkey brain.

Because how can I ignore this letter? How can I disregard the last  wishes of my mother when I'm her only child, her only heir, the only one  she ever had to lay all her hopes and dreams on?

I fold the letter back up, for tonight. For tonight, I concentrate on my  shitty reality TV show and my bottle of Cabernet, which I'm definitely  going to polish off by myself, propriety be damned.

For tonight, I let myself enjoy the first day off I'd managed to carve  in my schedule since as long as I can remember. Life here in the city is  hectic, but it's what I love. There's always something going on, always  a new project to focus on, always something to occupy my attention.  Much better than country life. Much better than that stifling hometown I  escaped the first minute I could.

For tonight, I enjoy the life I built myself, on my own sweat and blood and tears and exhaustion.

Then the next morning, hung-over and bleary-eyed from lack of sleep, I  unfold the letter one more time and dial the number at the bottom.

"Paul?" I ask the moment the estate handler picks up. "I need to book a flight back home … "

And that's how the real trouble began.