While My Family Flew To Paris, A Locksmith Opened The House They Never Owned-thuyhien

The locksmith arrived at 44 Wexler Lane at 9:06 a.m., while my father’s plane was still sitting on the runway.

His name was Dale, according to the badge clipped to his navy jacket. He parked behind Attorney Helen Marsh’s black sedan, looked up at the brick Colonial with its polished brass knocker, and said, “You’re sure this is authorized?”

Helen handed him the folder.

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Not a copy.

The original trust document.

The April air smelled like cut grass, damp pavement, and the faint smoke from a neighbor’s chimney. My hands were still sticky from airport coffee. The dog leash Richard had pushed into my palm hung from my wrist like a joke that had stopped being funny.

Dale read the top page. His eyebrows moved once.

“Sole beneficiary?” he asked.

Helen nodded.

“Effective upon trustee misconduct and beneficiary’s written request,” she said. “We filed the notice at 8:58 a.m.”

The dog, Mabel, sat beside my shoe and sneezed.

For fifteen years, I had entered that house through the side door when Celeste had guests. I had carried groceries through the mudroom. I had folded towels in the laundry room and eaten standing at the counter when the dining table was “for family.”

Now the front door was open in front of me.

Dale changed the first lock in twelve minutes.

The metallic click sounded small.

Helen heard it differently.

“That,” she said, “is possession.”

I stepped inside.

The house smelled like lemon polish, Celeste’s expensive vanilla candles, and the cold flowers she kept replacing before they wilted. Brielle’s pink suitcase was still sitting near the stairs, half-zipped, because she had packed three outfits too many and left the rest for me to put away.

On the hallway table sat a silver-framed photo from last Christmas.

Richard, Celeste, and Brielle in matching sweaters.

I was not in it.

Helen followed my eyes.

“You do not have to touch anything today,” she said.

“I do,” I answered.

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