She Called Me A Parasite In My Lodge, Then The Deed Came Out-eirian

The officer opened the blue folder, and Tiffany’s fake sobbing stopped so fast the room seemed to hear it.

He read the first page without speaking.

Then he checked my license.

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Then he checked the property tax receipts, the utility bills, and the insurance documents I kept in that folder because I had learned, after years in real estate, that paper does not care who cries the loudest.

Tiffany kept looking at Brad, waiting for him to say something clever, but Brad had gone quiet.

He knew what a deed looked like.

He knew his name was not on mine.

The officer finally looked up and handed the papers back to me with a nod that was small, professional, and devastating.

“This property belongs to Ms. Brooks,” he said.

Tiffany made a sound like she had swallowed glass.

Linda, still wearing my mother’s mink coat, stepped back toward the fireplace as if distance could make her less involved.

The younger officer noticed the movement and followed my eyes to the coat.

I told them it had been locked in the cedar closet of my bedroom, wrapped in preservation paper, and that nobody in that room had permission to touch it.

Linda’s face twisted.

She said Tiffany had told her it was an old thing from the attic, something I never used, something practically abandoned.

Tiffany snapped that I was being dramatic about a coat, but the officer did not laugh.

He asked who opened the closet.

Nobody answered.

That silence did more than any confession could have done.

The officer turned to Tiffany and Brad and explained, in the same calm voice he probably used on every holiday disaster, that they were trespassing after being asked to leave by the legal owner.

Then he added that entering a private bedroom closet and removing property could make the night much uglier.

Linda peeled the coat off with shaking hands and dropped it onto the sofa.

I picked it up before it touched the cushion, and the wine stain on the sleeve looked almost black against the fur.

That was the moment I stopped thinking about mercy.

I told the officers I wanted everyone out.

Brad tried the weather first.

He said the roads were dangerous, his parents were old, and I would have blood on my hands if anything happened.

Tiffany tried family next.

She said Mom would be ashamed of me.

That used to work.

For ten years, that sentence had been a key she could slide into the softest lock in me.

But I looked at my mother’s coat in my hands, and the lock was gone.

The officers gave them fifteen minutes.

The scramble was ugly.

Brad’s sister threw clothes into a suitcase while muttering that rich women were always insane.

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