During a so-called family meeting, my dad calmly announced he was “giving” my downtown apartment to my pregnant sister-in-law. He didn’t know my late grandfather had secretly signed the entire building over to me. My brother broke in to start packing my boxes, and the cops walked him out of “his” new home. Months later, the judge read his ruling — and my father’s face changed color when he heard the words… — Part 3

Over four years, the building became not just a place I lived, but a small, steady business. A living thing I tended.

Now my family wants to evict me from it.

I pull out the thick folder labeled “1247 WESTBROOK – LEGAL” and lay it on my coffee table. The deed is there, with my name. The amended trust, with Grandpa’s neat signature and the attorney’s embossed seal. Copies of the letters that had been sent to my parents—Dad as executor, Mom as next of kin.

He really never read them.

On Monday morning, I call Patricia.


I found Patricia three years ago on the recommendation of a coworker who’d gone through a nasty landlord dispute. “She’s scary in the best way,” he’d said, eyes wide. “Like, she smiles while she’s verbally disemboweling people in court.”

Now, as I sit in the small, tidy conference room of her office, I’m grateful for that reputation.

“So,” she says, after I finish explaining the family meeting. She leans back, steepling her fingers. “Your family is trying to evict you from your own building.”

“Yes.”

“Do they know you own it?” There’s a glimmer of dark amusement in her eyes.

“No. They think it’s in the family trust and that my father manages it.”

“And your father has what documentation showing his authority?” she asks.

“None that’s valid.” I slide the deed across the table to her. “Grandpa transferred the building to me directly before he died. It’s been in my name since then.”

She scans the page quickly, then nods. “Yes. Clear as day.”

“So they have no authority to—”

“None,” she says crisply. “They don’t own the property. They can’t terminate your residency. If they try to force you out, they’re in violation of landlord–tenant law. And that’s not even addressing the trust side of things.”

I let out a breath I didn’t realize I was holding. “There’s more,” I add reluctantly. “Eric texted that he’s ‘helping me get started on packing.’”

Patricia’s eyebrows lift. “Has he been in your apartment?”

“I haven’t seen it with my own eyes,” I admit. “But he has a key. Mom always kept an ‘emergency key’ in their kitchen junk drawer. Apparently he took it.”

“That’s illegal entry,” she says at once. “Possibly theft, depending on what he’s done in there. You said you have security cameras in the hallways?”

“Yes. Building security sends me logs for any complaint. They might have footage.”

“Get it,” she says. “Have them pull the dates and times your brother mentioned. We want documentation of every unauthorized entry.”

Her tone shifts slightly as she leans forward. “Cassie, I need you to be very clear about what you want here. Do you want to educate your family? Have a nice sit-down where we gently walk them through reality? Or do you want to establish firm legal boundaries?”

Images flash through my mind like an unwanted slideshow.

Eric smirking while he tells Shannon about my salary. Dad standing near the fireplace, talking about “what’s best for everyone” without once asking what’s best for me. Mom dismissing my job like it’s a hobby.

And four years of quietly doing the work of managing this building while they all assumed Dad was in charge, never thinking to ask who fixed the boiler or negotiated with the roofing company.

“Firm legal boundaries,” I say.

Patricia smiles, sharp and satisfied. “Excellent. Then here’s what we’re going to do.”


By Wednesday afternoon, the group chat has evolved from guilt and outrage into panic.

It starts with a call from Dad that I let go to voicemail. Then one from Eric. Then Mom.

When I don’t answer, the texts start.

Dad:

What is this legal letter?

Eric:

You got a lawyer involved? Are you insane?

Mom:

How could you do this to family? I’m shaking.

I scroll through the messages while standing at my kitchen counter, Patricia’s letter open on my laptop beside me. It’s beautifully, brutally succinct.

It states that I, Cassandra Morrison, am the sole legal owner of the property at 1247 Westbrook. That no other party has authority to make occupancy decisions or to enter any unit without my consent. That any attempt to remove my belongings or change my locks will be treated as illegal eviction and theft, with appropriate legal action to follow.

It also includes a separate cease-and-desist addressed to Eric, referencing building security footage confirming he’s used a key to enter my unit three times in the past week.

The tone is not apologetic.

Thursday morning, my father’s voice is clipped and brittle when he calls.

“We’re having another family meeting,” he says. “Today. Eleven sharp. My office.”

“Okay,” I say.

I know I should feel dread. Maybe a younger version of me, the one who flinched when Dad raised his voice in the car, would. But now what I feel is oddly like calm. Not peace, exactly—more like the stillness right before a storm hits when you’re standing inside a solid building with reinforced windows.

They can rage all they want. The paperwork is on my side.


Dad’s home office is cluttered in a way that would give my grandfather a stroke. Old bank statements spill out of file boxes. Stacks of manila folders lean precariously on a credenza. There’s a framed photo of Eric holding a fishing rod, another of me at my college graduation, slightly crooked on the wall.

Eric is already there when I arrive, arms crossed, playing with his wedding ring. Shannon sits in the corner on an upholstered chair, looking small and tense. Mom stands behind Dad’s leather chair, one hand anchored to the back of it like she’s bracing for impact.

The letter from Patricia lies in the center of Dad’s desk, like an accusation.

“Explain this,” he says, sliding it toward me as I sit.

“The building is mine,” I say. No point easing into it. “Grandpa transferred it to me before he died. I’ve owned it for four years.”

“That’s impossible,” Dad snaps. “The trust—”

“The trust was amended.” I reach into my bag and pull out copies of the relevant pages. I lay them on top of the letter. “You received copies in 2020. From Grandpa’s attorney. You never read them.”

Continue to Part 4 Part 3 of 7

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