My Sister Sold Tickets To My House, Then The Deed Went Public-thuyhien

The first thing I noticed was the smell.

My house usually smelled like old wood, clean plaster, lemon oil, and the faint mineral dust that follows a renovation even after you sweep twice.

That afternoon, it smelled like expensive perfume and burnt sage.

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I stood in the entry with a box of vintage tile cutting into my forearms, and my sister Alexandria stood in my kitchen holding champagne like she had been born there.

There were camera lights in my living room, two men adjusting reflectors near the fireplace, and a woman in a headset moving my chairs into a better angle.

My chairs.

The ones I had found at an estate sale after driving across the county before sunrise, then reupholstered on my own dining table because paying someone else would have blown my budget.

Alexandria looked into the camera and smiled.

“Welcome back to my channel,” she said, all silk and sunshine.

I watched her sweep one arm toward the living room I had spent two years restoring and call it the sanctuary she had been creating for months.

My parents were on the patio with iced tea.

Mom saw me first and lifted one finger to her lips, not in surprise, not in apology, but as a warning to stay quiet.

Dad’s expression did not move.

He looked proud.

That was the part that took the air out of me, because trespassing can be sudden, but betrayal usually has rehearsal marks on it.

The director called cut, and the room released its breath.

Alexandria turned toward me at last.

She did not say she was sorry.

She did not ask why my hands were scraped or why I was standing there in work boots covered in dust.

She looked at the tile and said, “Can you move that box? It is ruining the aesthetic.”

For a second I almost laughed, because there are insults so complete they sound unreal when they first land.

I asked what she was doing in my house.

She said the retreat had sold out, the sponsors were excited, and people were obsessed with the vibe.

The vibe was my labor.

The vibe was lead paint stripped in July, electrical wire pulled through plaster walls, and nights sleeping on a mattress on the subfloor because I could not afford rent and renovation at the same time.

I told her that.

I said, “This is my house.”

Mom came in from the patio with the careful, tired face she always wore when she was about to make me feel unreasonable.

“Natalie, don’t start,” she said.

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