Homeless At 18, Clara Paid £10 For A Lighthouse And Found His Secret-heuh

Homeless at 18, Clara Spent Her Last £10 on a Lighthouse – Then She Found What Her Grandfather Hid

The woman behind the counter looked at Clara as though she wanted to stop the whole thing before it became real.

The county office was warm in the wrong way, thick with damp coats, burnt coffee and the sour smell of old carpet after rain.

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Behind the glass partition, a printer kept shoving out forms with a tired mechanical cough.

Clara stood there with a torn plastic carrier bag hooked round her wrist, a brown solicitor’s envelope under one arm and a brass key lying cold in her palm.

She had turned eighteen that morning.

There had been no cake.

There had been no family photograph.

There had only been a quiet staff member at the group home, a bin bag for the last of her clothes, and the sort of goodbye people gave when they had already moved on in their heads.

Eighteen sounded grown-up until it arrived with no bed attached to it.

No parent was waiting outside in a parked car.

No relative had offered a sofa, not even for a week.

No bedroom had been kept for her with a mug on the windowsill and a clean towel folded at the end of the bed.

The only thing waiting for Clara was a letter from a solicitor saying her grandfather, Henry Whitfield, had died and left her a property.

At first she had thought there must have been a mistake.

Girls like Clara did not inherit property.

They inherited black bin bags, old school reports and a talent for saying they were fine when they were not.

But the letter had been clear.

A decommissioned lighthouse.

Two acres of coastal land.

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