“Mom’s necklace… where is it really?”
At first, he denied everything.
Then he broke.
He admitted it.
The night before the funeral, he had taken the real necklace and replaced it with a replica.
“She was going to bury it,” he said. “It would’ve been gone forever.”
He had it appraised.
Sold it.
Took the money.
I didn’t shout.
I didn’t need to.
The silence said everything.
Later that night, I went up to the attic.
Boxes from my mother’s house were still there, untouched for decades.
I found her diary.
And I read.
She knew.
Not about the theft.
But about what the necklace could do to people.
She had written about her own sister—how that same heirloom had destroyed their relationship.
How something meant to be treasured had turned into something that divided them.
And then I read the line that stayed with me.
“I will not let this necklace do the same to my children. Let it go with me. Let them keep each other.”
I sat there for a long time.
Then I called Dan.
I read it to him.
He didn’t speak for a while.
When he finally did, his voice was different.
“I didn’t know.”
“I know,” I said.
I forgave him.
Not because what he did didn’t matter.
But because my mother had already made her choice.
The next day, I called Will.
I told him I had something important to share—with both of them.
They’re coming over again this Sunday.
I’ll make the lemon pie.
And as I stood in the kitchen, I looked up without thinking.
“It found its way back,” I said softly.
“Just like you wanted.”