‘Before I sign anything,’ I said, reaching into my tote bag, ‘let’s make sure we’re all on the same page about the house.’ I pulled out a slim folder and laid it beside his envelope. Daniel’s smirk twitched. Mom’s eyes narrowed. ‘What is that?’ she snapped. ‘The deed,’ I said softly. ‘The real one. The house has been in my name since Grandpa died. He left it to me, not Mom. He just let her live there rent-free because she was his daughter.’ Daniel laughed, a short ugly sound. ‘That’s impossible. Mom’s been paying the mortgage for twenty years.’ ‘There is no mortgage,’ I said. ‘Grandpa paid it off in 1998. The money Mom collected from you every month for ‘helping with payments’? That went to her cruises. I have the bank records. I subpoenaed them last month.’ The color drained from Daniel’s face. Mom started to stand. I kept my voice gentle, the way I do with frightened children in the ICU. ‘Sit down, Mom. I’m not finished.’ I slid a second document across the table. ‘This is a thirty-day notice to vacate. Grandpa’s will had one condition I never enforced: the occupant had to treat me with basic respect. Tonight crossed a line I didn’t even know I had.’ Daniel lunged for the paper. ‘You can’t do this! Where is she supposed to go?’ ‘She has a son with a four-bedroom house in Westlake,’ I said, looking right at him. ‘I’m sure you’ll make room. After all, I owe her so much, right?’ The waiter arrived with the check. I picked it up, slid my card in, and stood. ‘Dinner’s on me. Consider it a housewarming gift.’ Mom was crying now, the performative kind. Daniel was pale and silent. I walked out into the cold parking lot, the antiseptic smell still on my sleeves, and for the first time in eleven years, I felt like I could breathe. My phone buzzed before I reached my car. Forty-three missed calls. I turned it off, started the engine, and drove home to the little apartment that had always, quietly, been enough.
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