She Came Home To Find Her Sister Had Given Away Her House-thuyhien

I knew something was wrong before I even turned off the engine.

There was a minivan in my driveway, and it was not parked like a visitor had stopped by for coffee.

It was angled too close to the garage, one wheel pressed against the damp edge of the lawn, the back window dusty from a long drive.

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The porch light was on even though the sun had not fully gone down, and two folding lawn chairs sat beneath it like somebody had settled in.

Beside my front door was a pair of men’s work boots.

I sat there with my hands still on the steering wheel, blinking through the windshield.

The air in Portland had that wet, leafy smell it gets after a spring rain, and I remember hearing the soft tick of my cooling engine and the far-off bark of a dog somewhere down the block.

For one second, a stupid thought passed through my mind.

Wrong house.

Then I looked at the rosebushes by the walkway, the ones I had planted myself the year after closing.

I looked at the white porch rail I had repainted after watching three tutorials and borrowing a sander from a neighbor.

I looked at the crooked little scratch on the front step, where I had dropped a ceramic planter my first summer there.

It was my house.

My name was Amanda Blake, and I had spent seven years saving for that house.

Not wishing for it.

Not waiting for someone to give it to me.

Saving.

I had worked late nights when other people went out.

I had eaten leftovers for dinner because the mortgage account mattered more than takeout.

I had skipped trips, kept my car longer than I wanted, and learned to fix things because calling someone cost money.

That white craftsman was not huge.

It was not fancy in the way real estate ads pretend everything is fancy.

But it was mine, down to the kitchen cabinet handles I had changed one Saturday while drinking gas station coffee from a paper cup.

I had been in Dallas for a three-day business trip, the kind where every hour was scheduled and every meal tasted like airport food.

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