Mum Arrived With A Removal Lorry — Then The Solicitor Stood Up-ngyen

Saturday morning, my mum walked into my house by the sea with a hired removal lorry and said, “We’re moving in. You can take the guest room.” She thought I’d stay quiet… until the man in the suit stood up.

At exactly nine o’clock, Alison Cole was sitting at her kitchen island with black coffee, an open spreadsheet and the rare pleasure of hearing nothing but the low hum of the fridge.

The morning outside was pale and damp, the kind of coastal grey that makes windows look colder than they are.

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A tea towel hung over the oven handle.

The kettle had clicked off a few minutes earlier.

There was a mug beside her laptop that had already gone lukewarm because Alison had become distracted by numbers, payments and the small satisfaction of having her own life in order.

She liked order.

Not because she was joyless, as her mother liked to say, but because chaos had been handed to her so often that she had learnt to lock the door against it.

The house by the sea was not grand in the way people imagined when they heard the phrase.

It was neat, bright, expensive because anywhere near water was expensive, and quiet enough that the sound of gulls could reach the kitchen when the back door was open.

To Alison, that made it priceless.

She had bought it after years of saving, serving, investing, postponing holidays and ignoring family jokes about being sensible to the point of dullness.

Her mother, Diane, had once laughed at her for buying government bonds in her twenties.

Megan, her younger sister, had called it tragic.

Alison had not argued.

Boring had paid the deposit.

Boring had paid the fees.

Boring had bought the one place where no one could burst in and tell her what she owed them.

Or so she thought.

At 9:02 a.m., a hired removal lorry rolled onto her drive.

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