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

The courtroom smelled like old wax, wet wool, and rain.

That was what I remember first, even before my sister said the words that made half the room stop breathing.

Not the judge.

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Not the lawyers.

Not my parents sitting behind me like they were at church waiting for a hymn.

Just the smell of polished wood and damp coats, and the slow drip of umbrellas shoved under courtroom benches while everyone pretended this was a civilized family matter.

My sister Nicole sat across the aisle in a cream-colored suit that looked as if it had been chosen by someone who understood how innocence photographs.

Her blonde hair was pinned low at the back of her neck.

Her pearl earrings were small.

Her lipstick was pale pink.

She looked calm, soft, wounded, and patient, which was exactly how she looked whenever she was about to take something.

Beside her sat her husband, Chris Irving, his expensive cologne reaching me before his voice ever did.

Cedar.

Sharp spice.

A little too much confidence.

Before the hearing began, Chris brushed past my chair so close his sleeve touched mine.

“Your little real estate game ends here,” he said under his breath.

I looked straight ahead.

I had learned a long time ago that not every insult deserves the dignity of an answer.

Sometimes silence is the only door you have left, and you lock it from the inside.

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