The call came on a Tuesday morning, slicing cleanly through the fragile peace I
had spent the last three months carefully constructing. I was sitting at the
massive oak island in my father’s kitchen, a cup of black coffee steaming in my
hands, watching the early sunlight lean across the original hardwood floors in
soft, golden bars.
When Eleanor’s name flashed across my phone screen, the air in the room seemed
to drop ten degrees.
Nothing that came from Eleanor was ever pleasant, nor was it ever without an
angle. She did not call to connect, to grieve, or to check in. She called to
establish dominance. She called to remind people of the version of reality she
preferred—the one where she was the undisputed matriarch, the center of gravity,
and everyone else was either a useful asset or an obstacle to be cleared.
I let the phone ring one extra beat. I took a slow, deliberate sip of my coffee,
feeling the heat anchor me, and answered with a voice I had practiced cooling
into absolute neutrality.
“Hello, Eleanor.”
“I’ve sold the house,” she announced. No greeting. No context. Not even the
faintest pretense of courtesy. Her tone held that familiar, glossy satisfaction,
rich and impenetrable as fresh lacquer. “The papers are signed, and the new
owners move in next week. I hope you’ve learned your lesson about respecting
your elders, Harper.”
For three full seconds, I said nothing at all.
My name is Harper Sterling, and the house Eleanor was so smugly discussing was
my childhood home. It was a sprawling, Victorian-craftsman hybrid with a
wraparound porch, a breathtaking stained-glass landing window, a deep claw-foot
tub upstairs, and a creaking back staircase that my father, Arthur, swore was
the soul of the architecture. It was the house where I had learned to read by
the fireplace, where I had once hidden under the mahogany dining table during a
thunderstorm while Dad pretended the sky was just rearranging its heavy
furniture.
It was also, according to Eleanor’s latest performance, a house she believed she
had just effortlessly ripped from my hands.
“The house?” I repeated, carefully keeping the dark, bubbling amusement out of
my voice. “You mean Dad’s house?”
“Don’t play dumb with me, Harper. You know exactly which house. The one you’ve
been squatting in rent-free since your father passed. Well, that little vacation
ends now. I found cash buyers. A lovely couple from out of state who will
actually appreciate the property and bring it into the twenty-first century.”
I lifted my mug again, letting her voice wash over me as my mind drifted to a
memory from just days after my father’s funeral. It was a quiet, highly
confidential meeting in a downtown high-rise with my father’s attorney, Benjamin
Vance. Eleanor had absolutely no idea about that meeting. She had no idea about
the thick manila folders, the notarized signatures, the irrevocable trusts, and
the iron-clad legal precautions my father had quietly arranged long before she
ever imagined she had him entirely figured out.
She had spent five years underestimating me. It had simply never occurred to her
ego that my father might have been doing exactly the same thing to her.
“That’s interesting,” I said smoothly. “And you’re entirely sure everything is
legal?”
She scoffed. Through the receiver, I could hear her moving—probably pacing the
expensive rugs of her rented luxury condo, probably smiling that sharp,
carnivorous smile she wore when she believed she was about to humiliate someone
publicly.
“Of course it’s legal, you insolent girl,” she snapped. “I am his widow. The
deed was in his name. You may have been his precious, over-coddled daughter, but
I have spousal rights. Maybe next time you’ll think twice before questioning my
authority regarding the remodeling.”
And there it was. The bruised ego. The real reason for her urgency.
Three months earlier, while my father was barely cold in his grave, I had
physically stood in the foyer and stopped Eleanor’s contractors from gutting the
historic features of the house. My father had spent two decades restoring it.
The hand-carved banisters. The original parquet flooring. The stained-glass
panels he had cleaned with a toothbrush, piece by piece, during a blizzard in
’98. Eleanor had wanted to rip it all out. She wanted sleek open shelving, gray
laminate, chrome fixtures, and bright, soulless lighting that would have made a
century-old home feel like an overpriced dermatologist’s waiting room.
