After Her Family Made Her Homeless, One House Key Turned Their Weekend Trip Into Panic-olive

The brass key hit the grocery store table with one small click.

For a second, no one moved.

Suzanne sat with both hands flat beside the cold coffee cup, the charging cord stretched from her phone to the outlet under the cafe counter. The bakery behind her kept opening and closing its oven door. Warm sugar and burned coffee mixed with the sharp smell of floor cleaner. Somewhere near the registers, a scanner beeped again and again like nothing important had just happened.

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Her father stared at the key.

Her mother stared at Suzanne.

Her sister stared at the phone, as if the lawyer might crawl out of the screen and take the whole house away in front of them.

“What did you do?” her father asked again, lower this time.

Suzanne didn’t raise her voice.

“I called Michael Hargrove.”

Her father’s face changed before he could stop it. His mouth tightened. The color left the skin around his nose. His fingers curled against the back of the empty chair beside him.

Her sister blinked twice.

“Michael who?” she asked, but her voice was too thin to sound innocent.

“The attorney who handled Grandma’s estate,” Suzanne said.

Her mother’s hand slid from her mouth to her throat.

A woman at the next table stopped stirring her tea.

Suzanne could feel people noticing now. Not staring openly, but doing that grocery-store thing where they slowed down near the napkin station or pretended to compare muffins while listening with one ear. Her father noticed too. He stepped closer to the table, trying to shrink the conversation with his body.

“Not here,” he said.

Suzanne looked up at him.

“Here is fine.”

Her sister let out a sharp breath through her nose.

“You’re being dramatic,” she said. “Nobody made you homeless.”

Suzanne turned her head slowly.

The fluorescent light caught the tired lines under her eyes. She still wore the same wrinkled sweater from the night in her car. Her hair was pulled back badly, loose strands stuck near her cheeks. Her phone sat between them with three missed calls from her sister still glowing on the screen.

“You paid my landlord $500,” Suzanne said. “He changed my locks. My car got towed with my clothes inside it. You went on a hotel weekend.”

Her sister’s lips parted, then closed.

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