My Sister Tried to Move Into My D.C. Penthouse While I Was Overseas, But the Door Code I Gave Her Wasn’t a Tenant Code-luna

The officer did not move right away.

He looked from my face on the smart screen to Victoria, then to the wall panel beside the door.

For one breath, nobody spoke.

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The only sound in that polished foyer was my niece sniffling into her stuffed rabbit and my mother’s voice crackling through Victoria’s phone.

“Lauren, stop this right now,” my mother said.

I kept my eyes on the officer.

“The access log,” I repeated. “It will show exactly what she accepted before entering. It will also show what kind of code she used.”

Victoria’s fake lease trembled slightly in her hand.

She tried to hide it by folding the paper against her coat, but the officer noticed.

So did Ethan Vance.

He had not raised his voice once since walking into his own home and finding strangers carrying suitcases through it.

That made him more frightening, not less.

He stood near the open front door in dark jeans, a gray sweatshirt, and the kind of stillness people develop when panic is not an option.

“Officer,” he said quietly, “I am the lawful owner of this residence. My identification is on the counter.”

The officer nodded, but his attention had already shifted to the panel.

He tapped the screen.

A soft chime sounded.

Victoria took half a step backward.

That was the first honest thing she had done all night.

The log opened in a clean column of timestamps, camera captures, and access categories.

I could read only pieces from the video call, but I did not need much.

Saturday, 9:18 p.m. Eastern.

One-time commercial service access.

Non-residential entry.

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