My Sister Claimed My House In Court Until The Judge Saw The File-Tep

The courtroom smelled like wax, rain, and old wood.

That was the first thing I remember.

Not the judge.

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Not my sister.

Not the document her lawyer held like it had fallen straight from heaven.

Just that dry, polished smell from the benches, the damp wool from everyone’s coats, and the slow drip of umbrellas pushed underneath the seats after a hard morning rain.

I sat at the left table with my hands folded so tightly that my fingertips had gone pale.

Across from me, my sister Nicole sat beside her husband, Chris Irving, looking like she had dressed for a family portrait instead of a property hearing.

Cream suit.

Pearl earrings.

Soft makeup.

Blonde hair pulled low and neat at the back of her neck.

Nicole had always understood the power of appearing harmless.

She could make her voice shake at exactly the right time.

She could turn her eyes wet without letting a tear fall.

She could sit beside a man like Chris, let him do the ugly work, and still look like the wounded one when the room turned to her.

Chris leaned back in his chair as if the hearing had already ended.

He was wearing a dark suit, polished shoes, and the expression of a man waiting for someone else’s keys to be handed over.

Just before the bailiff called the courtroom to order, he had walked past me so close that his jacket brushed my sleeve.

His cologne hit first.

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