Stepmother Gave Me A Broom At Dad’s Funeral — Then The Will Opened-heuh

At my father’s funeral, my stepmother handed me a broom and laughed, “This is your only inheritance. Start cleaning my new house.”

My stepbrother recorded me, mocking my tears for views.

I didn’t say a word until the solicitor opened the final will.

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Their smiles froze when he read the line my father had hidden in plain sight.

Then I looked at them and said, “Drop the broom. You’re trespassing.”

My father was barely cold in the ground when Marissa decided grief was a room she could rearrange.

The funeral had been grey from the beginning.

Not dramatic grey, not the sort that looks beautiful in photographs, but the ordinary British kind that seeps into coat collars, darkens pavements, and makes everyone stand a little closer under umbrellas they do not want to share.

By the time we returned to the house, the hems of the women’s black dresses were damp, the men’s shoes squeaked faintly on the hall tiles, and the lilies by the front door were already bending under their own weight.

Dad would have hated the fuss.

He hated people hovering.

He hated full cups left untouched.

Most of all, he hated false politeness, though he was better at spotting it than naming it.

The house still smelled like him beneath everything Marissa had sprayed over it.

Furniture polish.

Tea.

Rain on wool.

The faint woody smell of the old broom that lived near the back door because Dad believed no one should walk mud into a home and pretend they had not done it.

I stood beside the fireplace in the navy dress he had bought me when I passed the bar exam.

He had called it sensible.

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