The Deed On The Floor Exposed My Brother’s Cruelest Lie-xurixuri

My name is Captain Linda Morse, and I was thirty-three years old when my own brother tried to take our father’s house from me by force.

I do not say that lightly.

There are things your mind accepts only in pieces.

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The oak floor under your cheek.

The taste of blood.

The smell of coffee spreading into wood your father once sanded by hand.

The sound of a man you grew up with saying, “Sign it or die here,” like the word sister had never belonged to you at all.

Three days before that, we had buried Arthur Morse under a gray sky that looked too low for anyone to stand upright beneath it.

The house on Washington Avenue still smelled like lilies and casseroles when we came back from the cemetery.

Neighbors had left tuna noodle, baked ziti, scalloped potatoes, green bean casserole, and three pies nobody touched.

The kitchen counter looked like grief had been organized in foil pans and blue marker.

My brother Damian stood in the middle of it all with his hands in his pockets, already looking past the house.

Sarah, his wife, did not pretend for long.

By noon, she was on the phone near the stairs saying, “No, I said sell it,” while my father’s funeral flowers sat ten feet away.

I remember looking at her gold hoops flashing in the hallway light and thinking she had dressed for a meeting, not a burial.

Damian was forty, broad through the shoulders, the kind of man who liked being mistaken for steady.

He wore a dark quarter-zip sweater and spoke in low sentences that sounded reasonable until you listened to what was underneath them.

“Lin, we need to talk about practical things,” he said.

Practical was always Damian’s favorite disguise.

He used it when he wanted Dad to cosign a loan.

He used it when he needed Mom’s medical bills explained away as something we all had to “balance.”

He used it when he disappeared for eight months and came back saying he had been “figuring things out.”

That was the trust signal I missed for years.

Dad kept opening the door, and Damian kept learning there was no lock.

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