Sister Took The House Until A Black-Suited Stranger Revealed The Trust-Teptep

My sister did not arrive like someone entering a grieving house.

She arrived like someone coming to collect keys.

Ava stepped into my grandparents’ living room with a tidy folder pressed to her side, her cream blazer neat, her hair curled over one shoulder, and her mouth arranged into the sort of smile people use when they have already decided they are right.

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Behind her stood my parents.

That was the part that struck first.

Not the folder.

Not the papers.

Not even the way Ava’s eyes moved around the room, quick and bright, as if the furniture had already begun rearranging itself in her mind.

It was Mum and Dad standing behind her in the narrow hallway, united and silent.

Dad had that tight look he wore whenever he believed emotion was an inconvenience.

Mum had her hands folded in front of her, face soft, eyes careful, as though she were about to ask me to be sensible while something unbearable was done to me.

The house smelt of lemon polish, damp wool, and the tea I had let go cold.

The afternoon light came through the front window in a pale strip, touching the scratches in the floorboards and the old groove beside the fireplace where Grandpa’s chair had rocked for decades.

That chair was still there.

I had kept it exactly where he left it.

Some people call that sentiment.

I called it breathing.

Ava crossed the room and placed the folder on the coffee table with a flat little slap.

The sound made me jump.

“You’ve got until Friday to get out,” she said.

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