He made French toast on Sunday mornings, tucked little notes into my lunchbox, and cried quietly when he thought I wasn’t looking.
He was broken by grief, but he was still my dad.
Then Cheryl entered our lives when I was fourteen. She wore a perfume so strong it made my head ache, and she smiled in ways that never felt genuine when I was around. Dad believed she was warm, radiant, and comforting, but I saw through the act. She performed the role flawlessly for him, but her kindness always carried strings I could sense from a mile away. No matter what I did, I could never meet her expectations.
Still, I tried. For him. He deserved happiness, and I wanted him to have it.
Five years later, when Dad passed suddenly from a heart attack, my world shattered. At nineteen, just out of high school, navigating my gap year and learning to handle dentist appointments alone, I found myself without parents. My birthday came and went in a blur, a week after his death, leaving me feeling hollow.
It didn’t take long before Cheryl began treating me like an intruder in my own childhood home. She moved through the rooms as if she owned them, tossing out Dad’s old magazines and replacing family photos with her own. I caught her once, scrubbing his name off the mailbox, and when she noticed me, she didn’t flinch. She just rinsed the brush in a bucket of soapy water.
“Eleanor,” she said coldly, “you’re not really family anymore. It’s time for you to go.”
I didn’t argue. What was the point?
So, I packed a duffel bag with boots, a few shirts and jeans, underwear, toiletries, and my guitar. I passed Dad’s scarf on the coat rack but couldn’t touch it. That night, I stayed at my best friend Katie’s couch.
“Of course, you can stay here, Ellie. My home is yours,” she said, leaving a blanket and a glass of water on the side table. We didn’t need words. We just understood.
As I lay there staring at the ceiling fan, clutching my stomach to hold myself together, grief settled like wet cement in my chest. Before sleep claimed me, I called my father’s older sister, Janine. She answered immediately, listening as I stumbled through the story, the gasps and silence on the other end speaking volumes.
“I’ll take care of it, darling,” she said. “Are you okay at Katie’s, or should I come get you?”
“I’m fine,” I said, “but… help me, please.”
“Of course, Ellie. Go back tomorrow morning and get your things. I’ll meet you there.”
The next day, returning to my childhood home felt surreal. Five black SUVs lined the curb. Two men in suits waited by the door, almost unnervingly still. My heart raced. Had Cheryl called security to keep me out?
I rang the bell. Cheryl appeared pale and stiff. “Oh! You’re here! I was just about to call you, sweetheart,” she said, her tone jarring with its sweetness.
Sweetheart? I almost laughed.
“What’s going on?” I asked. “I just came to get my things.”
Before she could answer, Janine arrived in heels that clicked sharply on the driveway, holding a folder. “Perfect timing,” she said. “Let’s clear this up. My legal team is ready. Right, Cheryl?”
Cheryl hesitated, unsure whether to yell, cry, or lash out. Inside, two lawyers sat poised, one reading from papers, the other flipping through legal pads.
“This is ridiculous,” Cheryl scoffed.
Janine raised a hand. “Sit. Stop talking, Cheryl. Let’s not make this harder than it needs to be.”
Cheryl reluctantly sat, her defiance waning. I hovered by the doorway, stunned.
Janine turned to me, softening. “Your father never added Cheryl to the deed. He placed the house and land into a trust… in your name, Ellie. He planned to tell you when the time was right, but he didn’t get the chance.”
“You mean… the house is mine?” I gasped.
Cheryl laughed harshly. “Thomas would never do this without telling me!”
One of the lawyers slid a folder toward her. “This is a certified copy of the trust. You had temporary residence under its terms, but the beneficiary has come of age and revoked permission. You no longer have a legal claim to stay.”
“You can’t just kick me out,” she sputtered.
“You have one hour to gather your things. Anything left behind is considered abandoned,” the lawyer said.
The house I grew up in—chipped steps, crooked bird feeder, memories in every corner—was finally mine.
Cheryl packed silently, escorted by security, muttering under her breath, and left. I watched her go, feeling a mix of triumph and disbelief.
In the quiet aftermath, Janine handed me a glass of water. We sat at the dining table, where I had done homework while Dad stirred soup or tried to recreate Mom’s curry.
“I really miss your mom,” Janine said softly. “Her pecan pie especially. I know I’m not great at baking, but we should try making it.”
I smiled. “We can. Dad kept her recipe book. It should be in the cupboard under the kettle.”
We baked together, memories mingling with the smell of warm pastry. Aunt Janine confessed, “I never liked Cheryl. She rubbed me the wrong way from the start. Your dad… he trusted her. Or maybe he didn’t want to see what we saw.”
I nodded, mixing eggs into the flour. “Why didn’t he tell me about the trust?”
“He didn’t want you carrying the weight of defending what was already yours,” Janine explained. “He trusted me to protect it… and you.”
Later that night, I stood barefoot in my room, breathing in Dad’s old clothes, cedar and aftershave mingling with the quiet of the house. I ran my fingers over light switches he’d labeled in his messy handwriting.
In the living room, guitar across my lap, I played the song I had written after his funeral. It wasn’t perfect. Neither was I. But the house felt alive, filled with memory and healing. It was finally mine.