Sign the house over to your brother tonight, or I swear on my life

I reached down, unclipped my leather briefcase, and set a manila folder beside my untouched dinner. Diane laughed — that sharp, theatrical laugh she used when she thought she’d already won. “Oh, what’s this? A little spreadsheet? Sweetheart, paperwork doesn’t scare a mother.” I slid the folder across the table to Mark first. He opened it, and the color drained from his face so fast I almost felt sorry for him. Almost. “Diane,” I said softly, “this house has never been in Mark’s name. Not once. I bought it before we married, with money from my father’s life insurance. The deed, the mortgage, the renovation loans — all mine. Mark signed a postnup three years ago when his gambling debts almost cost us everything. You can ask him. He remembers.” Mark wouldn’t look up. Diane’s mouth opened and closed like a fish. I turned the next page. “And this is the eviction notice my attorney filed this morning. You have thirty days. Tyler’s name appears here too — apparently he’s been using this address to dodge a civil judgment from his last landlord. That’s mail fraud, Diane. I’ve already forwarded the documents.” Her wine glass hit the table so hard the stem snapped. “You can’t — Mark! Mark, say something!” Mark finally raised his head. “Mom… I told you to stop. I begged you to stop.” I stood up, smoothing my blouse. “I spent six years making this house beautiful while you called me the freeloader. I cooked your meals. I drove you to your appointments. And tonight you told me to eat out of a dumpster.” I walked to the door, opened it, and set her packed suitcase — the one I’d quietly prepared that afternoon — on the porch. “Friday works for me too,” I said. “But tonight works better.” She left in a taxi at 11 p.m., screaming into her phone. Mark slept in the guest room. The divorce papers were waiting for him at breakfast. And the house — my house — was finally, beautifully quiet.

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