“I’m not staying,” she said. “I’m here to deliver something.”
My father laughed awkwardly. “Deliver what? It’s Christmas.”
Marlene lifted the folder. “A letter from Dad,” she said. “Walter wrote it to be opened the first Christmas he wasn’t here—if Sophia wasn’t present.”
The air inside changed. I could see it on their faces—the sudden tension, the flicker of guilt.
My sister Chloe’s smile tightened. “Sophia couldn’t make it,” she said quickly. “We canceled.”
Marlene’s eyes narrowed. “Did you,” she asked, flat.
My mother laughed too high. “Of course. We didn’t want her driving in this weather. We told her not to come.”
From the porch, I felt my cheeks burn. Not because of the lie—I expected that. Because they said it so easily.
The lawyer opened her briefcase and pulled out a notarized document. “This is a conditional instruction,” she said. “Prepared by Mr. Walter Mercer and filed with my office.”
My father’s face shifted. “Conditional?”
Marlene’s voice cut through the room. “You’ve been living in Walter’s house,” she said, “under Walter’s rules.”
My mother blinked. “This is our house.”
Marlene opened the folder and read aloud:
“If my daughter Elaine and my son-in-law Peter exclude Sophia from Christmas again, they forfeit the right to reside at 17 Cedar Ridge. The home transfers immediately to Sophia Mercer, along with the maintenance trust established for it.”
Inside, my mother’s mouth fell open.
Chloe’s eyes widened. My father stood frozen, wine bottle in hand.
My mother stammered, “That’s… that’s ridiculous. He can’t—”
The lawyer spoke calmly. “He can. And he did. The deed was placed in a trust. Your right to live here was conditional on maintaining familial inclusion—specifically, not isolating Sophia.”
My father’s voice cracked. “Sophia doesn’t even live here.”
Marlene’s gaze was sharp. “Exactly,” she said. “And you still found a way to erase her.”
Chloe tried to laugh. “This is insane. It’s a misunderstanding.”
Marlene looked at the window—straight at me. “No,” she said loudly enough that I heard it through the glass. “It’s a pattern.”
I stepped away from the window, heart hammering. David touched my elbow gently.
“Now,” he said.
“What do I do?” I whispered.
