Stepmother Sold My Home—Then Dad’s Hidden Trust Turned On Her-heuh

Tuesday morning came in grey and damp, the kind of morning where an old house seems to breathe through its walls.

The kettle had just clicked off in the kitchen, and a thin thread of steam lifted from my mug while rain traced the window above the sink.

I remember the stained glass on the landing catching what little light there was and scattering it across the hallway in tired blues and reds.

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It was quiet enough that I could hear the fridge humming.

Then my phone rang.

Eleanor’s name appeared on the screen, neat and cold, as if even the letters had learned her manners.

I let it ring twice before answering.

‘Harper,’ she said, with no greeting and no warmth.

‘Good morning, Eleanor.’

‘I’ve sold the house.’

For a moment, I looked at the little garden beyond the glass, at the roses my father had planted along the fence because he said a house should give something back to the weather.

They were beginning to open despite the rain.

‘This house?’ I asked.

‘Don’t play stupid,’ she said. ‘The papers are signed. The new owners move in next week.’

She sounded almost peaceful.

That was Eleanor at her most dangerous.

Not shouting, not pleading, not explaining herself, but sitting inside a victory she believed had already been delivered.

I rested my hip against the kitchen worktop and kept my eyes on the garden.

‘That’s sudden,’ I said.

‘It’s been coming for a long time. You simply refused to accept reality.’

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