I unfolded the second document. Legal paper. Stamped.
Signed. Dennis had transferred the car’s title into something called The Bennett Trust. Beneficiary: Carol Bennett.
Restrictions: Not transferable without beneficiary consent. Which meant one thing. Brian had sold something…
that legally wasn’t his.
I looked up at Tom slowly. “You knew about this,” I said. He nodded.
“Dennis came here three months before he passed,” he said quietly. “He told me he was worried someone might try to take the car once he was gone.”
Tom rubbed the back of his neck. “He said, and I quote, ‘My boy’s heart is good, but that wife of his smells opportunity like a bloodhound.’”
That sounded exactly like Dennis.
“What about the key?” I asked. Tom pointed toward the back of the showroom. “That’s the other part,” he said.
We walked across the polished floor until we reached a large steel cabinet near the office wall. Tom inserted the key into the bottom lock and opened it. Inside sat a long wooden box.
Old. Weathered. The kind of thing someone kept for decades.
Tom lifted it carefully and placed it on a nearby workbench. “Dennis left this with me too,” he said. “He told me if the wrong person ever sold the car… this belonged to you.”
I lifted the lid.
Inside were neatly bundled envelopes. Dozens of them. Bank records.
Investment papers. And one small note on top. I unfolded it slowly.
Carol,
I know you worry about money more than you admit. So while I was rebuilding the car, I was also rebuilding something else. Our future.
Everything in this box is yours. My breath caught. Tom whistled softly as he glanced at the first document.
“Carol,” he said quietly. “You might want to sit down.”
I did. Because the numbers on those papers were far bigger than anything Dennis had ever mentioned.
Investments. Accounts. A retirement fund he had quietly grown for years.
Enough money to take that road trip. Ten times over. I sat there in silence for a long moment.
Dennis had known. He had known exactly what might happen after he was gone. And he had protected me anyway.
Tom finally spoke again. “What do you want to do about the car?”
I looked at the gleaming hood. At the reflection of my tired face in the paint.
Then I thought about Brian. About Vanessa. About the Paris trip they thought they had paid for.
I folded Dennis’s letter carefully. Then I stood. “I’m taking the car home,” I said.
Tom smiled. “Good.”
I turned toward the door. “But first,” I added quietly, slipping the trust papers back into the envelope.
“I think my son and his wife need to learn something about promises.”
Dennis had kept his. And now it was my turn.
