My Sister Used My Name For A £560,000 Mortgage-heuh

The bank said I owed $560,000 on a mortgage I never signed.

I remember the envelope because it looked too neat to be trouble. It arrived on a Tuesday, sealed with the bank’s mark, my full name typed cleanly on the front, my address written correctly for once. I stood in my kitchen with burnt coffee going cold beside the sink, the smell of lemon soap hanging in the air, and the ceiling fan ticking above me like a metronome counting down to something I had not yet understood.

My life had never been luxurious. It had been careful. I paid bills before I bought new clothes. I drove the same ageing car through every winter warning light and every strange noise it made on cold starts. I lived in a second-floor flat with thin walls, cheap curtains, and a bathroom tile that had been cracked for so long I had started stepping around it without thinking. A house was supposed to come later. Not now. Not yet. One day, when life had finally stopped taking every spare penny before it even reached my account.

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Then I opened the letter.

Mortgage delinquency notice. Foreclosure warning. Outstanding balance: $560,000.

At first my mind refused to join the words together. I read them once, then again, then sat down because my legs simply would not carry me anymore. The property address was in a gated development on the north side, with stone porches, clipped lawns, and lights by the drive that made every home look more expensive than the people inside it deserved. I knew the place. I had been there exactly once, at my sister Lauren’s housewarming.

I could still see her standing beneath the chandelier with a flute of champagne in her hand, smiling in that bright, polished way she had whenever she wanted people to believe her life had finally become perfect. My mother had cried beside the kitchen island. My father had clapped Lauren on the shoulder and said dreams came to people brave enough to want them. I had smiled until my face ached because that was what everyone expected from me.

I also remembered wondering how Lauren and her husband could afford that house at all. He never seemed to have steady work, and her boutique rarely looked busy enough to cover the rent on a shop front, let alone a home like that.

Then I saw the signature.

It was mine.

Or close enough to make my skin crawl.

The shape of it was right, almost unnervingly right. The slant. The loops. The tiny dip at the end. Not the hurried scribble of a stranger, but the careful imitation of someone who had spent time practising. Someone who had access. Someone who believed nobody would check too closely because the person whose name had been used was the sort of person who always dealt with things quietly.

I rang the bank twice before I could keep my hands steady enough to key in the numbers. The woman on the line asked for the account number, my date of birth, and the last four digits of my National Insurance number. Every answer felt like surrendering another piece of myself.

Then she told me the mortgage had been opened eighteen months earlier.

Eighteen months.

The contact email on the file was not mine.

It was Lauren’s.

I texted my sister one sentence: Why is my name on your mortgage?

The typing bubbles appeared. Disappeared. Appeared again.

No answer came.

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