When I returned home a year after my mother’s death, my own suitcases were waiting for me at the front door. It wasn’t like the house I remembered; the air smelled like drugstore perfume and greasy leftovers. The place was clean, calm, and full of warmth and love thanks to my mother. It felt invaded now.
I entered and stopped. As if she owned the place, a stranger sipped wine while poring over TV channels while lounging on the couch. She wore her robe, my mother’s robe, as though it were her own.
She regarded me as though I had broken in. “Oh,” she grinned, “you’re back early.” “My name is Tasha. Colin’s fiance.
Colin. The ex-boyfriend of my mother. The man she once loved but never married. Against my better judgment, I allowed the same man to stay after she passed away because she had requested it.
“Where is Colin?” Tightly, I asked.
“Out,” she said, taking a casual sip. However, he said you would comprehend. Now we need the room. It’s time for you to go.
I gazed at her. “This is my home.”
She chuckled. “Colin informed me that it was his.” A lawyer is on his way to put everything right.
I refrained from arguing. “Good,” I simply said. I’ll hold off.
She didn’t anticipate that. She lost confidence.
As my mother’s memories swirled, I sat silently across from her. I recalled her whispering, “Mia, the house is yours,” while she was in the hospital. I checked. You’ll be alright. I vowed to be resilient. I had granted her last request by allowing Colin to remain, albeit temporarily.
However, “a while” turned into a year. He was never gone. He filled it with strangers, threw out any remnants of her, and let it fall apart. His new fiancée was now attempting to evict me from my own house.
Twenty minutes later, Colin strode in, smiled, and planted a kiss on Tasha’s cheek. “She seems to have understood the message.”
Tasha laughed. “She’s handling it with maturity.”
Colin turned smugly to face me. “You’ve had time. I assumed you would be sensible.
The doorbell then rang.
I said, “That’ll be the lawyer.”
Colin opened the door, bewildered. A smartly dressed man entered carrying a briefcase. “I’m Mr. Edwards,” he said. “I was the lawyer for your mother.”
He spread papers across the table. All property, including this house, was bequeathed to her daughter, Mia, in accordance with the will. You don’t have the legal right to stay here, Colin.
Colin’s grin disappeared. “What?” “What?”
He added, “You have been squatting.” “No contract, no lease. You must leave right away.
Tasha blew up. “You claimed ownership of this house!”
“I—I thought…” Colin stumbled.
She snarled, reaching for her purse, “You LIED?” “I’m finished.” She gave me one last glance and hurried away, looking less irate than embarrassed.
Colin attempted to follow. “Wait, baby—”
The door slammed.
He turned pathetically to face me. “See, perhaps we can figure something out.”
I held up a hand. “Cease. Don’t refer to me as a “kid.” You should go.
The officers showed up at that point. “Banks, Colin? We’ve taken care of you. Leave the area within twenty-four hours.
“Where am I supposed to go?” he asked.
I gave a shrug. “That’s not my problem.”
I sat by myself that night and listened to boxes being filled and drawers being emptied. The house was returning to me for the first time in more than a year.
There was silence the following morning.
I entered the living area. The picture of my mother, which had been hidden in a box, was now back on the mantle. I lightly touched the frame.
“I didn’t break my word,” I muttered.
Kindness is often interpreted as weakness. It doesn’t. Establishing limits is a sign of strength. And now I was home at last.