I didn’t smile. I pulled out my own phone and made one call. Eleven words. “Dad. It’s happening again. Bring the paperwork. And bring Marcus.” Denise laughed so hard her pearls shook. “Oh, is Daddy gonna save you? What is he, a PLUMBER?” Four minutes later, three blacked-out Suburbans rolled up the cul-de-sac and parked in a wall across her driveway. Eight men in charcoal suits stepped out in formation. Then a silver-haired man in a navy overcoat walked straight past Denise like she was a lamp. He knelt down, kissed my forehead, and said, “You okay, baby?” Denise’s livestream was still running. 4,000 viewers watching. Her handyman dropped the drill. “Ma’am,” my father said, turning to her with the softest voice I’ve ever heard him use, “my name is Elias Vance. I’m the majority owner of Vance Holdings. We acquired the Ridgecrest Hills development corporation, the management company, and the underlying land trust in a portfolio buyout eleven months ago. You’ve been sending violation notices, on my daughter, from a board that legally dissolved in February.” Denise’s mouth opened. Nothing came out. Marcus — my father’s general counsel — stepped forward with a leather folder and slid one page toward her. “This is a cease-and-desist. This is a civil rights complaint. This is the federal fair-housing filing. And this,” he tapped the last page, “is the recorded deed showing Mrs. Vance-Rodriguez owns the parcel your padlock is currently attached to.” The handyman was already backing toward his truck. Denise looked at the livestream counter — 11,000 viewers now — and whispered, “Wait. Vance? Like… Vance Tower Vance?” My father didn’t answer. He just picked up the padlock off my porch, placed it gently in her manicured hands, and said, “You have thirty days to vacate the property YOU rent. From me.”
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