“I gave up everything for you,” I whispered. “My career. My relationships. Thirteen years of my life.”
Noah looked at me without blinking.
“We never asked you to.”
The words hit harder than any slap.
They had been five years old when I took them in.
They couldn’t have asked me anything.
But somehow, after all those years, they looked at me like I was just someone standing in the way of their money.
The next morning, strangers were already walking through my home.
Real estate agents measured rooms, took photos, and talked about renovations like I was invisible.
When I told one woman she had just walked into my bedroom, she glanced at her clipboard and said, “The owners said the whole house was available for viewing.”
The owners.
Not my nephews.
Not the boys I had raised.
The owners.
I called every lawyer I could afford. They all told me the same thing.
My name was not on the deed.
I had guardianship, not ownership.
Legally, I had no claim.
One older lawyer looked at me with pity and said, “They began this process the day they turned eighteen. That means they planned it.”
That hurt more than the eviction notice.
While I was baking their birthday cake, they had been preparing to throw me out.
When I asked them when they had decided I was no longer family, Mason casually admitted they had discussed it for years.
Noah said they wanted freedom.
Travel.
A nicer car.
A fresh start.
Then he added, “Honestly, you lived rent-free in our house for thirteen years. If anything, you owe us.”
That night, for the first time, the house no longer felt like home.
By the third week, I began packing.
I folded my clothes into old cardboard boxes.
I wrapped family photos in newspaper.
Some nights I cried on the bedroom floor until I had nothing left.
Other nights I stared at the ceiling, wondering where I had failed Caleb.
On the twenty-eighth day, Mason appeared at my door.
“The buyers want to close sooner,” he said. “You need to be out by Friday.”
Friday was two days away.
There was only one place I had not packed yet.
The attic.
Caleb’s old things were still up there, and I had been avoiding them because I knew the memories would hurt.
I climbed the narrow stairs and began moving boxes.
Then an old metal lockbox slipped from my hands and crashed open on the floor.
Inside was an envelope with my name written in Caleb’s handwriting.
My heart stopped.
Inside were legal documents.
A trust summary.
And then something else.
A guardian benefit fund.
Caleb had created a separate account for whoever raised his children if something ever happened to him.
For thirteen years, I had never known it existed.
There was enough money for me to buy a home of my own and live comfortably for years.
Beneath the documents was a note from Caleb.
He wrote that he hoped his sons would grow up understanding that love should be repaid with gratitude.
Before I could fully process it, Mason and Noah came rushing up the attic stairs.
They said the inspector had found a foundation crack.
Repairs would cost forty thousand dollars.
And they expected me to pay.
“Why would I do that?” I asked.
“Because you owe us,” Mason said.
For the first time in weeks, I felt calm.
I looked at the two young men standing in front of me.
Part 3
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