Stories: You’ve got one day to get out of my house

After my parents died in a car crash, I stopped feeling like the ground beneath me was solid.

At the will reading, I found out they’d left the family home to my father’s sister, Dina—the one who’d always hated me. There was no money left; it had all gone to Mom’s treatments. I told myself there had to be a mistake. There wasn’t.

Two days later, Dina showed up in heels that clicked against the hardwood floors I’d grown up on and said, “You’ve got one day to get out of my house.”

I begged. I told her I had nowhere to go. She didn’t care.

While she stretched out on the couch watching TV, I folded my life into two suitcases. Childhood photos. Dad’s old watch. Mom’s recipe book. The walls felt like they were already forgetting me.

The next morning, I walked out with tears in my eyes and saw a black limousine parked outside.

I almost laughed. Of course the universe would add a dramatic prop to my eviction.

I was about to walk past it when the back door opened and I heard my name.

I turned around—and gasped.

It was Mr. Calder.

He’d been my dad’s business partner years ago. I hadn’t seen him since I was a kid, when he’d come over for barbecues and brought me chocolate bars “just because.”

He stepped out slowly, his face older, softer.

“I’m sorry I couldn’t make it to the funeral,” he said. “I was overseas. But I came as soon as I heard.”

I wiped my face, embarrassed. “It’s okay. I’m just… leaving.”

“I know,” he said gently. “That’s why I’m here.”

He explained that my parents hadn’t left me the house because they couldn’t. It was tangled in debt after refinancing for Mom’s medical care. Dina had agreed to assume the debt in exchange for ownership. My parents hadn’t wanted me burdened with it.

“But that’s not all they left,” he added.

From the limo, he brought out a slim folder.

Years ago, he and my father had started a small tech investment together. When my dad got sick, he sold his share—but quietly kept a percentage in my name. It had grown. A lot.

“I was instructed to give this to you when you turned twenty-five,” Mr. Calder said. “Or earlier, if something happened.”

My knees went weak. The number printed on the statement made Dina’s smug eviction look very small.

“You don’t have to take the house back,” he said carefully. “But you don’t have to be helpless either.”

I looked at the place that had been my home. Then at the woman watching from behind the curtain.

I didn’t knock. I didn’t argue.

Instead, I got into the limousine.

Weeks later, I signed papers—not to reclaim the house, but to start fresh. A small apartment of my own. A scholarship fund in my parents’ name for cancer patients. Something good.

Dina kept the house.

I kept my future.

And for the first time since the crash, the ground beneath me felt steady again.

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