She Came With Eviction Papers. Naomi Had the Deed That Changed Everything-eirian

The first thing Naomi Thorne noticed was that Amber Vale did not knock.

That detail stayed with her long after people started calling the confrontation dramatic, impossible, humiliating, deserved, or legendary, depending on which neighbor was telling it and how much they had always resented Naomi’s gates.

The mansion at the center of Ashford Crest had been built around entry and permission.

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Nothing about it was accidental.

The mahogany front doors had been custom carved in Virginia and shipped in protective crates.

The marble had come from a quarry Naomi had visited herself, back when Grant Holloway still believed walking beside her meant he understood how she built things.

The foyer ceiling was high enough to catch morning light before the rest of the neighborhood woke.

Fresh lilies stood on the console table every Monday and Thursday because Elena, Naomi’s housekeeper, said the house looked too severe without something alive in it.

On that April morning, the lilies smelled bright and green, the marble smelled faintly of lemon oil, and the air inside the foyer was so still that the click of cream heels carried like a warning.

Naomi was at the foot of the staircase when the doors opened.

Elena had one hand on the brass handle and the other half-raised in apology.

“Ma’am, she insists—” Elena began.

She did not finish.

Amber Vale crossed the threshold as if the threshold had already been assigned to her by a man with a signature stamp.

She was twenty-six at most, with glossy dark hair, sharp cheekbones, and the practiced expression of a woman who had grown up watching people lower their voices when her father entered a room.

Her cream heels clicked across Naomi’s marble floor.

Her handbag hung from her wrist like proof.

In her hand was a thick envelope.

Behind her stood two men in cheap suits who had dressed for authority but not earned it.

Behind them was a local sheriff’s deputy whose face suggested he had spent the entire drive reminding himself that civil process was not the same thing as justice.

Naomi looked at the deputy first.

Not because he was in charge.

Because he was the only person in the doorway who looked uncomfortable enough to still have a conscience.

Amber smiled.

“Naomi,” she said, drawing the name out with poisonous sweetness. “You should sit down for this.”

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