Brother Drugged My Tea To Steal Our Farmhouse Until The Floorboards Spoke-thuyhien

The tea always arrived in the blue mug.

That was the first detail Iliana Mercer trusted too much.

Her mother had used that mug for chamomile on winter nights, always with honey, always with a spoon left inside until the steam fogged the kitchen window.

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So when Cassian started bringing it to her after moving back into the farmhouse, Iliana let the ritual soften her suspicion.

He was her brother.

He was grieving too.

He said the city had eaten him alive and he only needed a few months under the roof where they had been raised.

The farmhouse belonged to Iliana now, not because she had grabbed for it, but because she had stayed.

She had handled the medications, the hospital rides, the bills, the hospice forms, and the terrible quiet after both funerals.

Cassian had arrived for the will reading in a dark coat and a hurt expression, then hugged her stiffly when the lawyer handed her the deed.

“You always get what you want,” he had murmured outside the office.

Iliana had pretended not to hear the edge under it.

Six months later, he was in the guest room, his shoes by the back door, his voice low on late-night phone calls he ended whenever she entered.

The tea began three weeks after that.

The sleep came harder than natural sleep.

She would wake with her alarm screaming from the dresser, her tongue dry, her head heavy, and the strange feeling that morning had climbed over a wall without her.

At first, she blamed the archives.

Then she noticed the small wrong things.

Her laptop was closed when she had left it open.

Her purse sat at a different angle on the chair.

One drawer in her desk gaped two inches, though she never left drawers open because her mother had hated that.

Iliana told herself she was tired.

Then Cassian set the estate papers beside her mug.

They were not thick, but they felt heavy when she pulled them closer.

The top sheet said Durable Power of Attorney in a font that looked coldly official.

The paragraph beneath it said her brother could control the farmhouse, her bank accounts, and all estate records if a physician found her mentally unfit to manage them.

The words did not accuse her directly.

They simply built a cage and waited for someone to push her into it.

Cassian watched her read.

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