She kicked me out… until the black SUVs pulled up.

 

… “What’s going on?” I asked, gripping the strap of my guitar case tighter.

Before Cheryl could answer, a tall, severe-looking man in a tailored suit stepped into the doorway behind her. He adjusted his glasses, looking from a terrified Cheryl to me.

“Miss Morison?” he asked. “I’m Arthur Sterling, the senior partner at your father’s law firm. We’ve been trying to reach you since yesterday. It seems your stepmother ‘misplaced’ your contact information.”

Cheryl let out a high-pitched, nervous laugh, grabbing my arm with clammy hands. “Oh, Arthur, don’t be silly! She just went camping with friends to grieve! I was just welcoming her back. We are so close, aren’t we, honey?” She squeezed my arm hard, her nails digging into my skin, a silent threat in her eyes.

I pulled my arm away. “I don’t know who you are,” I said to the lawyer, “but I wasn’t camping. She kicked me out two days ago. She told me I wasn’t family anymore.”

The color drained from Cheryl’s face. She looked like a ghost.

Mr. Sterling nodded grimly and opened a leather folder he was holding. “That is exactly what your father feared might happen.” He turned his cold gaze to Cheryl. “As per the ‘Protection Clause’ in your late husband’s will: ‘Should my daughter be removed from the family home or denied access to her inheritance by my spouse, the spouse’s share of the estate is immediately revoked and transferred in full to my daughter.’

Cheryl’s knees buckled. “No… no, you can’t do that! It was a misunderstanding! I was grief-stricken!”

“The terms are absolute,” Sterling said, snapping the folder shut. He signaled to the security guards by the SUVs. “The house, the cars, and the accounts now belong solely to Miss Morison. You have thirty minutes to pack a bag and leave the premises, Cheryl. Or the police will escort you out.”

Cheryl started screaming as the guards stepped onto the porch, but I didn’t watch. I walked past her, past the fake tears and the greed, and stepped back into my father’s house. I set my guitar down in the hallway. I was finally home, and for the first time in five years, the air felt clear.

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