She Built Her Own House From Diner Tips — Then Her Aunt Tried To Move In-QuynhTranJP

The locksmith did not hurry up the walkway.

That was the first thing Diane noticed.

He moved like a man who had been told exactly what kind of house he was walking into, exactly who owned it, and exactly who was not supposed to receive another key.

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His silver toolbox swung beside his knee. A laminated badge knocked softly against his jacket zipper. Behind him, the van idled at the curb with its hazard lights blinking orange against my front windows.

Brad looked from the locksmith to me.

“Why is he here?”

I kept my fingers closed around the baby-blue key until the teeth pressed marks into my palm.

“To change the last lock.”

Diane gave a small laugh. It was polished, almost social, the kind she used at church potlucks when someone dropped a spoon.

“Don’t be dramatic, Mara. We’re family.”

The word family sat on my dining table between the deed papers and the tax-lien receipt like a dirty cup no one wanted to touch.

The locksmith knocked once, even though the door was already half-open.

“Ms. Ellis?”

“That’s me.”

Diane’s head turned slightly when he used my last name with respect. Brad shifted his suitcase off the welcome mat, but the wheels had already left two muddy lines across the fibers.

The locksmith stepped inside and paused. His eyes moved to the folder, then to Diane’s hand resting on the notarized agreement.

“Front door, back door, garage entry,” he said. “And the side gate padlock?”

“Yes.”

Brad’s mouth opened.

“You’re seriously locking us out?”

I looked at him then. He was thirty-one and still had the same face he made at nineteen when he used to eat the food I bought with tip money and call it his mother’s pantry.

“You were never in.”

Diane’s cheeks tightened. She lifted the top page as if the paper had offended her.

“This doesn’t mean what you think it means.”

“It means what your lawyer explained before you signed it.”

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