My Sister Got Miami Luxury While Dad Left Me A Cabin And A Warning-Teptep

The funeral had hardly ended before the family house began to feel less like a place of mourning and more like a room where judgement had already been passed.

Rain moved quietly against the windows, and the dining room smelt of cold tea, damp coats, and sandwiches no one really wanted.

My mother had set out the good china because that was what she did when she did not know how to manage pain.

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The plates were polished, the napkins were folded, and the kettle had clicked off twice without anyone pouring properly.

Everything looked respectable from a distance.

Up close, it felt wrong.

My father’s solicitor arrived with rain on the shoulders of his coat and a leather folder tucked beneath one arm.

He gave my mother a careful nod, the sort of nod people use when words would only make the room more uncomfortable.

My uncle sat near the end of the table, one hand around a mug he had not drunk from.

Megan sat at the head.

No one had asked her to sit there.

No one ever had to ask Megan anything.

She occupied space as though it had been waiting for her.

People looked towards her before they answered questions.

They laughed when she smiled.

They forgave her before she had finished doing whatever needed forgiving.

I sat halfway down the table in the clothes I had travelled in that morning.

My blouse was creased from the flight, my hair still smelt faintly of airport coffee and rain, and my body felt too tired to decide whether it was grieving or simply numb.

I had buried my father only hours earlier.

Now I was sitting among relatives who were already waiting to hear how his life would be divided into property, papers, keys, and value.

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