I set my fork down slowly. ‘Mom,’ I said, ‘the house isn’t in your name.’ Her smile flickered. ‘Don’t be ridiculous, Hannah. Of course it is.’ I reached into my bag and slid a manila folder across the table. Inside was the deed, transferred to me in 2019 when Dad could no longer make payments and the bank was three weeks from foreclosure. He had signed it himself, in front of a notary, with a letter explaining that I was the only one who showed up. I had never told her. I had kept paying the property taxes, the repairs, the new roof last spring, and I had let her keep her pride. She stared at the paperwork. Her hand started to shake. ‘You — you tricked him.’ ‘I saved it,’ I said quietly. ‘And I never asked for rent. I never asked for thanks. I just asked that you not pretend I was invisible.’ Right on cue, Tyler walked in through the side door without knocking, his fiancée trailing behind him with a tape measure already in her hand. ‘So,’ he grinned, ‘when can we start moving our stuff in?’ I stood up. I picked up the folder. I looked at the three of them — my mother pale, my brother smug, his fiancée eyeing the cabinets like she was redecorating in her head. ‘You can start,’ I said, ‘by being out of MY house by the end of the month. Mom, I’ve already arranged a one-bedroom apartment for you across town. Rent is covered for a year. After that, ask Tyler.’ My mother gasped. Tyler’s face collapsed. His fiancée slowly lowered the tape measure. I walked to the door, then turned back one last time. ‘I spent my whole life earning a seat at this table. Turns out I owned the table.’ I closed the door softly behind me, and for the first time in years, the silence on the other side belonged to them.
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