Sister Tried To Steal My Mountain House — Then The Judge Asked One Question-heuh

My younger sister dragged me into a courtroom to steal the mountain house I had built with eight years of sacrifice.

Her husband smirked and whispered, “Your little property empire ends today.”

Then the judge looked up and asked how many properties I owned.

Image

“Twelve, Your Honour,” I said.

The room went silent.

But the real explosion began when the forged papers started looking less like a family dispute and more like a criminal case.

The courtroom had that particular smell only old public rooms seem to keep.

Wet wool.

Polished wood.

Paper handled by people who had already made up their minds.

Rain struck the windows in hard little bursts, turning the glass grey and restless.

I sat alone at the defendant’s table with a blank legal pad in front of me, though I had not written a single word.

There are moments when your body knows something is about to break before your mind accepts it.

My hands were still.

Too still.

Across the aisle, my younger sister Nicole sat with her ankles crossed and her cream suit perfectly arranged.

She looked calm in the way people look calm when they believe the room has already chosen their side.

Beside her, Chris leaned back in his chair like a man waiting for applause.

He had always enjoyed my discomfort more than he enjoyed my company.

That morning, he did not even bother to hide it.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *