She Brought Eviction Papers to Naomi’s Mansion. Then the Deed Spoke.-eirian

The first thing Naomi Thorne noticed was not the envelope.

It was the absence of a knock.

Her front doors had been built from solid mahogany, custom carved by a third-generation craftsman in Vermont and installed fifteen years earlier, when Ashford Crest was still mud, survey flags, and a set of drawings most bankers had called too ambitious.

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Those doors had seen architects come through with rolled plans, investors come through with polished shoes, and charity guests come through with champagne breath and bright smiles.

They had never been shoved open by a twenty-six-year-old woman in cream heels who believed ownership was something her father could print on letterhead.

Elena, Naomi’s housekeeper, tried to stop her.

“Ma’am, she insists—”

That was all Elena managed before Amber Vale crossed the threshold like she had rehearsed the entrance.

Cream heels clicked against marble.

The sound was crisp, sharp, and wildly out of place in a home where people usually lowered their voices the moment they stepped into the foyer.

Naomi stood at the foot of the staircase with her hand resting on the banister.

The April sun spilled through the open doors behind Amber and showed every detail Naomi needed.

The thick envelope.

The two men in cheap suits.

The local sheriff’s deputy who looked apologetic before anyone had spoken.

The black SUV idling outside.

The neighbor’s curtains moving across the street.

Amber Vale wanted witnesses.

Women like Amber did not bring civil papers quietly unless quiet was all they had.

Naomi had known of Amber for three years before she met her properly.

Grant Holloway had left Naomi for Amber after fourteen years of marriage, two failed business ventures, and one very expensive midlife crisis disguised as romance.

He called it happiness.

Naomi called it what it was.

Youth, flattery, and borrowed money.

Grant had not always been useless.

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