My sister had just passed away, and my brother-in-law was preparing to re-enter the world, but he was trembling. His face turned pale with fear when the lawyer read the will…
My sister – Ate Mara – was a gentle, patient, and forgiving woman. And she… had just left this world more than a month ago. She died of a terrible cancer that she had silently endured for years, without worrying anyone, including me – Ana, her closest sister. My family in Quezon City was devastated; my mother cried her eyes out, and I felt like I had fallen into a bottomless void. But what hurt me the most was not the loss, but the attitude of my brother-in-law – the one who should have been in the most pain.

My brother-in-law – Anthony Villanueva – has long been the “ideal husband” in the eyes of outsiders: stable job in Makati CBD, well-spoken, previously gallant to his sister. But as time went on, I found him increasingly cold and indifferent to Ate Mara. She always covered things up, made excuses for her husband; and I just silently observed.

When she passed away, he could not shed a single tear.

— “I am so tired… And her passing is also a relief. At least she can rest now.”

He spoke as if he was talking about the weather. I thought I had misheard.

Less than a few weeks after the funeral at St. Paul’s Church, Quezon City, he posted a photo of himself having a fancy dinner in BGC, then was caught with a strange woman at a cafe in Ortigas. I told my mother about this; she just sighed:

— “Men… Don’t worry about it anymore, let your sister rest in peace.”

I couldn’t accept it. One evening, I went straight to the house in Teachers Village, Quezon City – the house that bore the couple’s name – to talk.

— “Mr. Anthony, at least you should keep some morals? My sister passed away less than a month ago and you’re already seeing someone new? Or are you flirting while she’s still in her hospital bed?”

He shrugged, nonchalantly:
— “Love can’t be forced. My sister passed away, do you have the right to continue living?”

I choked. Then he added, making me shiver:
— “My sister passed away at the right time… at least I didn’t have to get a divorce. There’s less property issues.”

I wanted to slap him in the face, but I held back. Because I remembered what Ate Mara told me before she passed away – a sentence I didn’t understand until then:
— “If one day I’m no longer here, remember to come to the opening of my will. There will be some interesting things.”

And she was right.

Exactly one month after her death, we received an invitation from the law office in Ortigas, Pasig, where Ate Mara had drawn up her Last Will and Testament a year earlier – when she was seriously ill. At the will reading, in addition to my family and Anthony, there was Atty. Gomez, her personal lawyer.

Anthony sat there comfortably and confidently. I even saw him smirk when he saw the title of the will mentioning the house property in the couple’s name. Perhaps in his mind, he was thinking of selling the house to “start fresh”. But then, Atty. Gomez began to read: “I, Maria Reyes Villanueva, bequeath all my assets, including 60% interest in the matrimonial home in Quezon City, to my sister Ana Reyes. I have made this transfer/recording at the Registry of Deeds – Quezon City a year ago, after becoming aware of my health condition.

I am not leaving any assets to my husband, Mr. Anthony Villanueva, for personal reasons. At the same time, all savings accounts in my name with a total value of over ₱1 million will be transferred to my sister and my parents.”

The room was silent. Anthony paled.

— “What? She can’t… she has no right to do that!”

Atty. Gomez calmly said:
— “Mara has full rights to her separate assets and has completed the legal procedures, notarized and noted on the Title at the Registry of Deeds. You may check the records.”

Anthony jumped up and slammed the table:

“Ana, you are my sister, how could you help me do this?”

I replied, my voice calm but cold:

“I only followed my sister’s wishes. The shameful one is you – the husband who just lost his wife and was in a hurry to remarry.”

The reading of the will ended in my brother-in-law’s panic. From someone who thought he was about to inherit wealth and freedom, he now had nothing left. With 60% of the ownership transferred to me, the decision was mine. According to the lawyer’s notice, he had to leave the house within 30 days, unless he agreed to buy back my share at market price – something he could not afford.

In the end, I understood: Ate Mara was never as weak as she showed. She endured silently, but never let the person who hurt her be at peace. She left quietly, but left a slap in the fake conscience of the traitor.

As for me – the younger sister who always watches over her – I will continue to live in her place, protecting the honor and justice of the strongest woman I have ever known. In the Philippines, people often say “utang na loob” – today, her kindness is to leave us all with an awakening: love can yield, but dignity cannot.