My Parents Wanted My House Until One Deed Left Them Locked Outside-eirian

The call came through while Annabelle Croft was standing at the kitchen sink with a sponge in one hand and a casserole dish soaking under hot water.

Her father’s name lit up on the phone.

She answered because she always answered.

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That had been one of the quiet rules in her family, the kind nobody had to say out loud because she had been trained to obey it before she was old enough to question it.

If Mom cried, Annabelle fixed it.

If Dad sighed, Annabelle made room.

If her parents needed money, patience, errands, a driver, a daughter, a nurse, or a place to live, Annabelle somehow became all of those things before anyone had to ask twice.

This time, though, her father had not meant to call her.

His phone had been in his coat pocket at a restaurant in Scottsdale, pressed against keys or a wallet or whatever else had tapped her contact by accident.

At first she heard only the soft noise of a good dinner: silverware touching plates, a waiter passing nearby, her mother’s laugh bright and loose in the background.

Annabelle almost hung up.

She almost smiled and said, “Dad, your phone called me,” because that would have been the polite thing, and politeness had kept her trapped for a long time.

Then her mother said her name.

“She won’t fight it,” Marlene Croft said.

Annabelle turned off the faucet.

Water slid from the sponge into the sink in slow drops.

“Mention your back pain,” Marlene continued. “Mention the doctor bills. She feels guilty about everything.”

Her father’s voice came next, calm and satisfied.

“By next year the deed will have our names on it.”

Annabelle did not move.

The kitchen around her suddenly looked unfamiliar, as if the room had stepped away from her and become evidence.

There was the leather recliner her father had placed in front of the window where her grandmother’s orchids used to sit.

There was the spice cabinet her mother had rearranged twice without asking.

There was the blue ceramic cookie jar Francis Croft had loved, now shoved on top of the refrigerator because Marlene thought it made the counter look crowded.

The house was not her parents’ house.

It had never been their house.

It was a four-bedroom Craftsman in Clover Ridge, Virginia, left to Annabelle by her grandmother alone, with Annabelle’s name on the deed and no mortgage attached to it.

Francis had bought it decades earlier, painted it the same gray-blue every few summers, and planted an oak tree in the backyard the year she decided she was going to survive on her own.

When Annabelle was a girl, she used to sit in that tree with a library book and a sandwich wrapped in wax paper.

Francis would look up from the garden and say, “There’s my girl.”

Not the useful one.

Not the easy one.

My girl.

That was why the house mattered.

Not because of the money, though there was money in it now, enough that developers had been circling the neighborhood for years.

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