Her Sister Wanted The House. The Judge Found Twelve Properties.-Tep

The first thing I noticed in the courtroom was the smell of old wood polish.

Not justice.

Not fear.

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Not even the sour coffee breath of the lawyer sitting two chairs away from me.

Just wood polish, dust, damp wool coats, and the faint metallic scent of rainwater drying on the courthouse floor.

It had stormed that morning.

Half the people in the gallery had come in shaking umbrellas, tracking wet footprints down the aisle, and leaving small dark puddles under the benches.

The courthouse lights hummed above us, too white and too steady.

Across from me, my sister Nicole sat in a cream suit that probably cost more than my first car.

Her blond hair was swept into a low knot.

Pearl earrings.

Pale lipstick.

Hands folded neatly in her lap, like she had spent her life praying instead of taking.

Beside her, her husband Chris Irving leaned back in his chair with the loose confidence of a man who believed every room eventually rearranged itself around him.

Before the hearing began, he brushed past my shoulder and whispered, “Your little real estate game ends here.”

He was close enough for me to smell his cologne.

Cedar.

Something sharp underneath it.

Something poisonous.

I did not answer him.

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