The Broken Wardrobe My Family Mocked Held the Letter That Changed My Father’s Estate-yumihong

The attorney did not knock a second time.

My mother stayed in the chair with her hand still reaching toward the papers. My brother stood near the table, the house deed curled in his fist, his expensive watch catching the thin afternoon light. My sister had gone stiff on the couch, one gold bracelet half-fastened around her wrist as if her hand had forgotten how to move.

The doorbell rang again, calm and professional.

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My uncle looked from me to the front window. The woman in the navy suit waited on the porch with a leather briefcase pressed against her hip. Behind her, the black sedan sat at the curb with its engine off. No drama. No siren. No raised voice. Just polished shoes on my father’s cracked concrete path.

My mother swallowed.

“Don’t open that door,” she said.

No one moved.

The old floor fan rattled beside the hallway. Somewhere in the kitchen, the refrigerator clicked on. The smell of burnt coffee had gone bitter in the air.

I picked up the sealed envelope from the hidden compartment and held it against my chest.

My brother took one step toward me.

“Give that here.”

I turned my shoulder slightly so my uncle stood between us. He did not speak, but his hand closed around the back of a dining chair.

The third ring sounded.

This time, I walked to the door.

My fingers were dusty from the wardrobe. Red paint flakes clung under one nail. The brass key was still warm in my palm. When I opened the door, the attorney looked past my shoulder for one second, taking in the room exactly the way hospital nurses take in a patient before touching them.

Then she looked at me.

“You must be Emily Carter.”

My full name landed in the doorway like a document stamp.

“Yes.”

“I’m Diane Mercer. I represented your father privately for the last seven months.”

Behind me, my mother made a small sound through her nose.

Diane stepped inside only after I moved back. She did not ask my mother for permission. She did not smile at my brother. She did not soften her voice for the room.

She carried the scent of cold air, leather, and printer paper.

“I was instructed to come today at 3:30 p.m. if you opened the compartment,” she said.

My brother gave a short laugh.

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