Aunt Stole A Funeral Brooch, Then The Swamp House Deed Exposed Everything-QuynhTranJP

The sheriff’s warning landed on the porch like a hand over Marlene’s mouth.

Her fingers stayed locked on my mother’s cameo brooch. The white shell face on it had turned sideways, pinned crooked against her linen jacket, like even that dead little profile was trying to look away from her.

Dale took one step back from the table.

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The real estate agent lowered the clipboard to his thigh. His pen made a small plastic click when his thumb slipped off the top.

Sheriff Hollis did not raise his voice. He was a broad man with rainwater on the shoulders of his tan uniform and mud drying along one boot. He looked at the blinking recorder, then at the eviction notice, then at Marlene.

“Mrs. Price,” he said, “move your hand away from the brooch.”

Marlene blinked once. Her lips pressed into a hostess smile that had worked at church picnics, charity auctions, and courthouse fundraisers for thirty years.

“Sheriff, this is a family misunderstanding.”

“No, ma’am,” he said. “Family misunderstandings don’t usually come with forged notices.”

The attorney, Mr. Bellamy, stepped onto the porch behind him. He was eighty-one, thin as a fence rail, with a gray suit that smelled faintly of tobacco and old paper. He placed his leather folder on the table but kept one hand over it.

“Marlene,” he said, “you should sit down.”

“I will not be ordered around on my sister’s property.”

The porch boards creaked under Dale’s shoes. He looked toward the driveway, where two men in work shirts stood beside an empty moving truck. One of them had already dropped the metal ramp. The ramp edge rested in the crushed shells like an accusation.

Mr. Bellamy opened his folder.

“This has not been your sister’s property since her death,” he said. “It transferred to Nora at 12:01 a.m. the day after Caroline passed. The county confirmed it yesterday at 3:40 p.m.”

Marlene’s smile thinned.

The swamp air pressed wet against my neck. Somewhere under the dock, a fish slapped the surface. Diesel fumes floated from Dale’s idling truck. My black dress still had dried mud along the hem from the north dock, and the cash box sat on the table with brown water leaking from one corner.

Marlene looked at me then.

Not at the sheriff. Not at the deed.

At me.

“You don’t even know what to do with a house like this,” she said softly. “Your mother kept you small on purpose.”

I touched the cash box lid with two fingers.

The metal was cold.

“My mother kept records,” I said.

Dale’s face changed at the word records. His jaw shifted sideways. His eyes moved to the recorder again.

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