My mother leaned back in her chair and looked straight at me.
“You have forty-eight hours to move out.”
For a moment I thought I had heard her wrong.
“What?”
“This house belongs to Emily now.”
Emily.
My older sister.
The same sister who moved to California six years ago and rarely called unless she needed something.
I turned toward my father.
He avoided my eyes.
Instead, he stared down at his plate, slowly cutting another piece of chicken as though the conversation had nothing to do with him.
A tight feeling twisted in my chest.
“For five years,” I said quietly, “I’ve been paying the mortgage on this house.”
My mother shrugged.
“That doesn’t make it yours.”
“I paid for the new roof.”
“That’s just maintenance.”
“I refinished the floors.”
“Your decision.”
“I bought most of the furniture.”
She waved a dismissive hand.
“Don’t exaggerate.”
My father still said nothing.
Not when I was the one writing the checks every month.
Not when I spent weekends repairing the house my grandfather built.
Not when Emily barely remembered where the place was.
“She’s moving back,” my mother continued.
“And she deserves stability.”
The word deserves lingered in the air.
I let out a short laugh.
“Emily hasn’t even visited in three years.”
“That’s beside the point.”
“Then what’s the point?”
My mother stood and carried her plate to the sink.
“The point is this house will be hers now.”
Forty-eight hours.
Five years of effort reduced to two days.
I waited for my father to say something—anything.
He never looked up.
So I didn’t beg.
I didn’t yell.
I simply stood up and walked to my room.
Inside, I locked the door and sat on the edge of the bed. My hands were trembling—not from anger, but disbelief.
Then I picked up my phone and called the one person I trusted.
My best friend, Caroline.
Who also happened to be a real estate lawyer.
She answered right away.
“What happened?”
I told her everything—dinner, the ultimatum, the house, and my grandfather.
There was a long silence.
“I need to check something,” she said.
“Give me an hour.”
Fifty-eight minutes later my phone rang again.
Caroline’s voice sounded different this time—focused and serious.
“You need to listen carefully,” she said.
“My God…”