Her Sister Used Her Name To Buy A House. Then Sunday Dinner Came-Ginny

The bank called me during my hospital shift and said I was three months behind on a $623,000 mortgage.

I told them they had the wrong person because I had never owned a house in my life.

Then they gave me the address.

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It was my sister’s dream home.

The hallway outside the pediatric ward smelled like disinfectant, warm coffee, and the rubber soles of nurses moving too fast.

Somewhere behind me, a monitor gave its steady little beep.

A child was crying in one room.

A parent was whispering in another.

I had been on my feet since before sunrise, and the collar of my navy scrub top was damp from rushing between patient rooms.

When my phone vibrated in my pocket, I almost let it go.

That is what you do during patient care.

You let the rest of the world wait.

But my elderly neighbor, Mrs. Callahan, had been admitted the night before, and for one anxious second I thought the call might be about her.

So I stepped into the hallway near the nurses’ station and answered.

“Hello, this is Heather.”

A man with a careful, professional voice said, “Miss Wilson, this is Craig Donovan from Washington Mutual Bank. I’m calling about your missed mortgage payments.”

I actually looked down at my shoes, as if the answer might be lying there on the hospital floor.

“My what?”

“Your mortgage payments,” he said. “You are currently three months behind.”

I gave a short laugh because the sentence did not belong to my life.

It sounded like someone else’s problem had been mailed to the wrong apartment.

“I don’t have a mortgage.”

There was a pause.

Keyboard clicks.

A paper shifting close to the receiver.

“Our records show you took out a mortgage for six hundred and twenty-three thousand dollars in January.”

The number hit me slowly.

$623,000.

I rented a one-bedroom apartment with a sticky window latch and a radiator that clanked every winter.

I drove a used car that needed new tires.

I bought coffee from the hospital cafeteria only on paydays.

“I rent,” I said. “I rent a one-bedroom apartment.”

Craig stayed calm.

“The property is on Highland Drive.”

Everything in me went still.

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