After Her Brother Claimed Her Apartment, The Folder At The Curb Changed Everything-eirian

“Now.”

The word landed in the lobby harder than any shout could have.

Jay stood there with the tape gun hanging from his hand, its loose strip stuck to his sleeve. Marissa’s phone pointed toward the floor now, screen still glowing, her thumb frozen over the record button. The smell of concierge coffee drifted between us, bitter and hot, while the lobby’s marble floor threw everyone’s reflection back up at them.

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Daniel Pierce closed the navy folder with one clean click.

The sound made Jay blink.

“Eden,” he said, quieter this time. “Don’t do this in front of people.”

I looked at the boxes stacked by the elevator. One had my unit number written across the side in black marker. Another said KITCHEN — OPEN FIRST, like they had already decided which drawer would hold their silverware.

“They brought belongings into the property after being told they had no tenancy rights,” Daniel said to the building manager. “Please document the removal.”

Mr. Calloway, my building manager, nodded once. He had been with the building since before I bought it, a gray-haired man with a soft voice and a clipboard that made tenants straighten their backs.

“Jay Waverly?” he asked.

Jay snapped his head toward him. “You know me.”

“I know your sister owns the building,” Mr. Calloway said. “That’s all I need today.”

Marissa’s face pinched.

“This is insane. We just got married. We don’t have anywhere ready yet.”

Her voice had gone syrupy, the same tone she used last weekend when she asked me if I could move the bar cart closer to the balcony because the sunset would look better behind her champagne tower.

“You had an apartment,” I said.

Jay’s jaw worked once.

“The lease ended. We thought—”

“You thought my home was the backup plan.”

No one spoke for three seconds.

The doorman shifted near the entrance. Outside, the black sedan idled at the curb, exhaust curling in the cool morning air. A woman from the sixth floor stepped out of the elevator with a yoga mat under her arm, saw the legal papers, and stepped right back in.

Marissa tried again.

“Eden, family helps family. You hosted the wedding because you wanted to. You never said we couldn’t stay.”

Daniel opened the folder again.

“Ms. Arden,” he said, using her new married name before she could correct him, “you were sent a written venue-use agreement three weeks ago. It authorized access for one event day, one setup day, and one cleanup morning. No residential use. No storage. No occupancy. You signed it electronically at 8:44 p.m. on March 27.”

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