She Brought an Assessor to Steal My Cottage, But the Deed Was Already Recorded-yumihong

My mother’s hand stayed suspended between my chest and her folder, the pearl bracelet caught on the corner like even her jewelry had been ordered to wait.

The deputy did not move fast. That made it worse for her.

Fast would have given Linda Mercer something to perform against. Fast would have let Paige cry, let my mother clutch her pearls, let them both turn the porch into another family courtroom where I was always the defendant.

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But the deputy only took out a small notebook.

“Mrs. Mercer,” he said, “step down from the porch.”

The lake wind pushed through the pine trees. My coffee had gone flat and cold beside the railing. Somewhere behind my mother, the assessor’s pen clicked once, then stopped.

My mother looked at the deputy as if he had misread his place in the scene.

“This is a family matter.”

“No, ma’am,” he said. “It became a property matter when you entered after notice.”

Mr. Hale held up the sealed sleeve with the deed inside. His tie was slightly crooked, and that small human detail steadied me more than any speech could have. He had come from forty minutes away on a Saturday morning because at 7:38 the previous evening, my mother had left a voicemail on my business line saying, “You’ll cooperate tomorrow, or we’ll make this public.”

She had meant shame.

Mr. Hale had heard threat.

Paige took off her sunglasses. Her eyes were dry.

“Mom, tell them,” she whispered.

Linda lowered the folder slowly. Her smile rebuilt itself one piece at a time.

“My daughter has always struggled with practical decisions,” she said to the deputy. “She makes impulsive purchases. She doesn’t think long-term. We were only trying to help preserve the cottage for the family.”

The old script came out polished smooth.

Not cruel enough for strangers to gasp. Not loud enough for anyone to call it abuse. Just soft enough to make me look unstable if I objected.

The deputy’s gaze shifted to me.

“Ma’am, did you request this assessment?”

“No.”

“Did you invite Mrs. Mercer or Ms. Paige Mercer onto the property today?”

“No.”

“Did you authorize any transfer discussion?”

“No.”

Paige laughed under her breath.

“Oh, come on. You’re acting like we broke into Fort Knox.”

My dog growled again, deeper this time. I touched two fingers to his collar. The porch boards felt damp under my shoes, gritty with pine dust and lake mist.

Mr. Hale turned to the assessor.

“Sir, who contacted your office?”

The man in the county-blue polo swallowed. He was younger than I had first noticed, maybe thirty, with a sunburned neck and a clipboard held too tightly against his stomach.

“Mrs. Mercer submitted the request online,” he said. “She listed herself as authorized family representative.”

My mother’s chin lifted.

“Which I am.”

“No,” Mr. Hale said.

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