The $95,000 Piano Betrayal That Made Grandma Call Her Lawyer-myhoa

The family living room looked almost normal when I walked in, and somehow that made it worse.

The couch was still angled toward the fireplace.

The family photos were still lined along the mantel.

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My mother’s glass bowl of fake lemons still sat in the middle of the coffee table like nothing in that house had ever been touched by shame.

But the piano was gone.

Not moved.

Not covered.

Gone.

There was a pale rectangle on the hardwood where it had stood for as long as I had been alive, a clean scar left behind by forty years of dust, sunlight, wax, and music.

I stood in that room with my car keys still in my hand and stared at the empty wall.

The radiator clicked once in the corner.

The refrigerator hummed from the kitchen.

For a second, I could almost hear the low breath of the Steinway anyway, that faint wooden settling sound it made when the house warmed in the afternoon.

Then the silence swallowed it.

My grandmother Evelyn’s piano was a 1912 Steinway, walnut, hand-carved, with a chipped ivory key near middle C.

She used to say that chipped key was how she knew it was hers.

“Perfect things don’t remember us,” she told me once.

I was twelve then, sitting beside her in a sweater too itchy for my skin, trying to get through the left hand of “Rhapsody in Blue” without stopping.

Grandma had laughed when I slammed both hands into the keys and said Gershwin hated children.

“No,” she said, tapping the sheet music with one finger. “Gershwin just knows when you’re lying.”

That piano had belonged to her long before any of us understood what it was worth.

To me, it was not an antique.

It was every Saturday afternoon she gave me after my grandfather died.

It was the smell of lemon oil on the bench.

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