What Trevor didn’t know was that Marion hadn’t left the house to him. She’d left it to me. Trevor had lived there for six years on a technicality — Marion’s will named him only as a “permitted occupant” until her younger brother, meaning me, chose to take possession. She’d known. Even dying, she’d known exactly who her husband was. Her lawyer, Mr. Halberd, had begged me for years to enforce it. I’d refused. Marion had loved Trevor once, and I wasn’t going to be the one to rip the roof off a grieving widower. But a squatter? A parasite? Hauled to the dump? At sunset, I didn’t leave. I sat on the porch swing with a manila folder on my lap. Trevor pulled into the driveway with Brittany, saw me, and started shouting before he even got out of the truck. I let him finish. Then I opened the folder. “This is the deed,” I said quietly. “My name. Since 2019. This is the occupancy clause Marion wrote. And this,” I tapped a second document, “is the thirty-day notice to vacate my property. Mr. Halberd filed it this morning. You have until the fifteenth.” Trevor’s face went the color of old paint. Brittany looked at him like he’d shrunk two feet. “You can’t — this is my house —” “It was never your house, Trevor. Marion knew what you were. She just hoped I wouldn’t have to prove her right.” He tried threats. He tried tears. He tried offering me the Mustang I’d rebuilt with my own hands. I told him the Mustang was already mine too — the title transfer he’d “forgotten” to finish after I paid off his debt three years ago had quietly gone through last spring. Brittany left before he finished packing. Trevor moved into a studio above the laundromat on Route 9. I opened the garage doors the next morning, hung Marion’s old wind chime by the window, and finally, after six long years, breathed in a house that felt like hers again. Sunset, indeed.
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