Parents Smiled As The Bailiff Came For My Grandad’s House-Teptep

The county court bailiff told me to leave my grandfather’s house by noon while my parents smiled from across the street.

My mother shouted, “You should have listened.”

I asked who filed it, because the deed in my fireproof pouch carried only my name.

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At first, I thought there had been a fire.

Nobody bangs on a front door at six in the morning unless something is burning, someone is hurt, or life has arrived wearing a uniform.

I was half dressed when I opened my bedroom door, my cardigan hanging from one shoulder, my heart knocking so hard I could feel it in my throat.

The house was still dark at the edges.

The old radiator clicked under the window.

Rain tapped against the glass in that soft, miserable way it does when the whole morning feels undecided.

I moved down the narrow hallway, stepping over the pair of gardening shoes I kept meaning to put away.

My grandfather had hated clutter by the front door.

“People show you who they are by how they leave a threshold,” he used to say.

At the time, I thought it was one of his odd little sayings.

That morning, with someone hammering at his front door, it came back to me with a cruelty I did not understand yet.

Through the spyhole, I saw a uniform.

Then a clipboard.

Then the square black eye of a body camera.

I slid the chain across before I opened the door.

The man on the step looked tired rather than cruel, which somehow made it worse.

He had the expression of someone who had already done three difficult things before breakfast and still had more to go.

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