She nodded weakly. “I know that now. I just realized it too late. He took everything, Mom. I have nothing left to give.”
“It is not too late,” I said, pulling the freshly printed legal documents from my folder. “I need your help, baby. We are going to change exactly what he thinks he gets to walk away with.”
I explained the new will. I told her about the $500,000 life insurance policy that Greg was waiting to collect. Then, I told her about the idea David and I had quickly formed on the phone. We would establish a charitable foundation in her name. A foundation designed exclusively to support public school teachers facing terminal illnesses—grants for medical travel, classroom continuity funds, and emergency rent support.
As I described the foundation, a miraculous transformation occurred. The deep, haunting shadow of defeat lifted from her eyes. A spark of the passionate fifth-grade teacher returned.
“For teachers?” she whispered, a faint smile touching her cracked lips.
“For teachers exactly like you,” I promised.
She swallowed hard. “Could we… could we buy books, too? For kids who don’t have any at home?”
I laughed, a wet, tearful sound. “Yes, my sweet girl. We can buy all the books in the world.”
Brenda and another night-shift nurse stood by as witnesses. A mobile notary public, a stern Alaskan woman who had driven through the snow at 6:00 AM, oversaw the process. Sarah signed the documents slowly. Her hand trembled violently, each stroke of the pen a monumental, agonizing labor of love and defiance.
When the final seal was stamped, Sarah let her head fall back against the pillows. She closed her eyes and let out a long, shuddering sigh.
“I feel like I can finally breathe,” she whispered.
We spent her final two days immersed in memory instead of fear. We didn’t mention Greg’s name again. We talked about her childhood in Chicago. We talked about her favorite students. We looked through the glittery pink photo album I had brought, laughing at the crooked construction paper hearts.
On the third afternoon, the golden Alaskan sunlight slanted across her bed. The room was perfectly quiet.
Sarah opened her eyes one last time, looking directly into my soul.
“I love you, Mom,” she breathed.
“Always, my baby. Always.”
She took one more shallow breath. And then, none.
I sat beside her body for hours after the monitor was turned off. I held her hand as it grew cold, thinking of every age she had ever been. Six years old, with pigtails. Twelve, glittering a photo album. Thirty-five, dead in a hospice facility because a greedy, arrogant man decided her suffering was a financial inconvenience and her death was a liquid asset.
The funeral was held four days later in Juneau. It was heavily attended by her school colleagues, the principal, and dozens of sobbing parents whose children she had taught.
Greg did not show up.
But Chloe did.
She arrived alone, standing at the very back of the church. She wore plain black clothing, no makeup, and looked entirely wrecked—a stark contrast to the glossy, tanned woman in the Bahamas photos. She approached me only after the service ended and the crowd began to disperse.
“Mrs. Hayes,” Chloe said, her voice shaking violently. “I am so, so sorry.”
I stared at her with eyes like flint. “Did you know she was dying?”