Her Family Wanted Her $2.1M Villa. One Envelope Changed Court.-habe

The first time my father spoke to me after almost six years, he did not say my name.

He called me a thief.

I was sitting in a Florida courtroom with my hands folded on the table and my old calculator in my bag.

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The air conditioner hummed above us like it had been installed to drown out people’s breathing.

The wooden table smelled like furniture polish, paper, and old coffee.

Across the aisle, my father sat with his attorney, his jaw set in the same hard line I remembered from childhood.

Gerald Price never looked uncertain when an audience was watching.

He looked like a man who believed the room would bend if he spoke loudly enough.

His lawyer stood and told the judge that I had stolen money from Price Family Cleaners to buy a $2.1 million beachfront villa in Destin.

Then he said the deed should be transferred to my sister before lunch.

Before lunch.

As if the house were a misplaced coat.

As if the only real question was how quickly I could be made small again.

Amber sat behind him in a cream blazer, one ankle crossed over the other, her posture so neat it felt rehearsed.

She looked like a woman waiting for keys.

My mother sat beside her, pressing a tissue flat in her lap.

She had always done that when she did not want to choose sides.

She would make herself busy with something soft until the hard thing passed.

Only this time, nothing was passing.

My name is Kendall Price, and I grew up in a family where usefulness could be mistaken for love if you were young enough.

Amber was the daughter people took pictures of.

She got dance lessons, sorority dues, new dresses, spring break money, and forgiveness before she even found the words to ask for it.

I got a calculator.

I was twelve when my father threw a silver TI-84 onto my bed and said, “You like numbers so much, knock yourself out.”

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