She Called Him A Moocher Until The Police Read His Deed Aloud-eirian

The night Briana tried to throw me out of my own house, I had just been celebrating the first piece of good news that did not feel haunted.

My name is Joseph, and I was twenty when my parents died.

My mother died on impact in a highway collision caused by a drunk driver with a suspended license.

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My father survived three days in the ICU, long enough for hope to turn cruel.

Uncle Victor sat beside him during daylight hours, reading baseball scores and weather updates like my father might wake up annoyed that he had missed a game.

Aunt Carmen stayed with my mother, brushing her hair and painting her nails because she said nobody in our family would ever leave looking unloved.

When the doctors said there was no brain activity, Victor held my hand while I signed papers no twenty-year-old should ever have to sign.

After the funeral, I had money and no map for what to do with it.

Insurance, retirement accounts, investments, the sale of my parents’ house, and my father’s vintage motorcycles left me with enough to be called lucky by people who did not understand that luck would have been one more dinner with them.

Victor and Carmen noticed I was coming apart.

I was skipping classes, eating takeout over the sink, and sleeping in a rental house that felt too quiet by half.

Victor suggested I move in with them for a while.

I had a different idea.

My advisor had told me real estate was better than letting grief make decisions, so I bought a four-bedroom house outright.

It had a three-car garage, two acres, a finished kitchen, and enough room for a family that had been broken and was trying to become one again.

I asked Victor and Carmen to live there with me.

I would cover the property taxes, insurance, utilities, maintenance, and repairs.

They would help me learn how to be an adult without my parents.

That arrangement saved me.

Victor taught me how to grill steak, compare insurance policies, read a contractor’s estimate, change brake pads, and sit through a bad day without making it worse.

Carmen taught me how to wash dress shirts, cook vegetables, remember birthdays, and stop pretending frozen food counted as dinner.

Their son Jacob became the brother I never had.

He was four years younger than me, but grief made age feel irrelevant.

We gamed together, fixed cars in the garage, double dated, argued over barbecue rubs, and showed up for each other in the quiet ways men sometimes do when they do not have the words.

For years, the house was full of life.

Sunday dinners came back.

Christmas smelled like cinnamon again.

Birthdays had candles instead of empty chairs.

Then Jacob met Briana Walsh.

Briana was twenty-six, blonde, polished, and convinced that looking expensive was the same as being successful.

She called herself a marketing coordinator, which sounded impressive until I learned she answered phones and updated social media for a small local firm.

There is nothing wrong with that work.

There is something wrong with lying about it while treating everyone else like staff.

At her first Sunday dinner, she photographed Carmen’s food from six angles before eating it.

She asked if the drink was organic.

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