The Fake Notary Stamp Fell From Her Purse Before My Brother Could Lie Again-myhoa

The sheriff held the fake notary stamp between two gloved fingers and looked at my sister first.

Melissa’s red nails curled against her palm. Rainwater ran from the porch roof in thin silver lines, splashing near the toe of her beige heel. The stamp had landed upside down on the concrete, leaving a wet purple smear beside my doormat.

Grant took one step backward.

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My mother’s pearls clicked softly against each other as her throat moved. My father, who had spent the previous night sitting at my kitchen table like a man dividing property he already owned, stared at the certified deed in the county clerk’s plastic sleeve.

The sheriff did not raise his voice.

“Ma’am,” he said to Melissa, “do not touch your purse.”

Melissa’s hand froze halfway to the strap.

Grant tried to smile again, but his mouth only pulled to one side.

“Officer, this is not what it looks like,” he said. “We were trying to help my sister with paperwork.”

The sheriff looked down at the stamp, then at Grant’s crooked collar, then at the folder in my hands.

“Then you will have no problem answering questions separately.”

Separately.

That word changed the porch.

My father’s shoulders shifted. My mother reached for him, but he moved half an inch away from her fingers. Melissa looked at Grant like the plan had always belonged to him. Grant looked at me like I had hidden a door under the floor and opened it beneath his feet.

I stood with my bare feet just inside the threshold. The tile was cold under my heels. The air smelled of wet leaves, porch paint, and the bitter coffee I had poured at 6:10 that morning but never drank. My evidence folder pressed against my ribs, thick enough that the metal clip had left a dent in the cardboard.

The county clerk, a small woman with a gray raincoat and sharp eyes, lifted the sleeve with the certified deed.

“This deed was recorded twelve years ago,” she said. “Sole owner: Claire Whitman.”

My mother’s lips parted.

Not because she did not know.

Because someone else had said it out loud.

Grant rubbed his jaw. “That can’t be right.”

The clerk turned the plastic sleeve toward him. “It is right.”

My father’s voice came out lower than usual.

“Claire, bring this inside. We can talk as a family.”

The sheriff stepped between us before I moved.

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