My Grandmother Gave Me a Malibu Mansion for My 21st Birthday—Six Hours Later, My Mother Tried to Move My Sister In and Take It From Me.-iwachan

The second envelope was tucked beneath the deed, sealed in cream paper, with my name written in my grandmother’s thin blue handwriting.

For one second, everyone stared at it.

My father stopped reaching.

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My mother stopped breathing hard.

Even Aubrey lowered her phone.

The foyer was so quiet I could hear the ocean below the cliffs, rolling against the rocks like a warning.

I slid my finger under the flap.

Mom said, ‘Madison, don’t.’

That was the first time all night she sounded afraid.

Not angry. Not insulted. Afraid.

I opened the envelope.

Inside was a single note from Grandma Vivien and a stack of legal documents thicker than the birthday card still shaking in my other hand.

The note came first.

Maddie, if you are reading this tonight, then I was right about them.

My throat tightened.

Grandma had always seen too much.

She noticed when I ate the cheapest thing at restaurants.

She noticed when my mother praised Aubrey for breathing and criticized me for needing rest.

She noticed when I learned to make myself smaller around people who called that maturity.

The note continued.

Your mother has mistaken access for ownership her entire life. This house is yours. I protected it before I gave it to you.

My mother took one step forward.

‘Give me that.’

I pulled the papers closer to my chest.

Dad’s face turned dark. ‘Madison, this has gone far enough.’

I looked at him then.

Really looked.

At the man who had watched my mother slap me and chosen the marble floor instead of my face.

He had always done that.

Looked away at the exact moment I needed him to see me.

I unfolded the first document.

It was not a letter.

It was an attorney instruction packet.

At the top was the name of Grandma’s law firm in Los Angeles, printed in heavy black letters.

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