She Came Home From Dallas And Found Her Sister Claiming Her House-lbsuong

Amanda Blake came home from Dallas with a boarding pass folded in her purse, a laptop bag cutting into one shoulder, and the kind of exhaustion that settles behind the eyes after three days of smiling in conference rooms.

She expected her house to be quiet.

She expected the porch light to be on, the hallway to smell faintly like the lavender candle she had left on the entry table, and the kitchen to look exactly the way she had left it before the airport ride at 5:18 a.m. on Monday.

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Instead, there was a minivan in her driveway.

It was not parked politely along the curb or tucked off to the side.

It was pulled right into the spot where Amanda always parked, as if whoever had driven it there had already decided the driveway belonged to them.

Two folding lawn chairs sat on her front porch.

One had a dented soda can tucked under the armrest.

Beside the front door, a pair of heavy men’s work boots rested on the mat she had bought the first spring after closing on the house, the one that said welcome in small black letters and had already been worn down by Portland rain.

Amanda stood on the walkway with her suitcase handle in one hand and her keys in the other, staring at the boots like they might explain themselves.

For a second, she wondered if the rideshare had dropped her at the wrong address.

That thought lasted only until she looked at the rosebush by the mailbox.

She had planted it herself, on a Saturday afternoon when she was still so newly proud of the house that she kept finding reasons to walk outside and look at it from the street.

The house was a white craftsman with green trim, a narrow porch, and hardwood floors that creaked in three specific places.

It had taken her seven years to buy it.

Seven years of late nights, careful budgets, canceled vacations, old furniture, packed lunches, and saying no to things she wanted because she wanted one thing more.

A home with her name on it.

Not a room in someone else’s house.

Not a couch she could be asked to leave.

Not a temporary place where her peace depended on somebody else’s mood.

Her own home.

Amanda unlocked the door and stepped inside.

The first thing that hit her was the smell.

It was not lavender or lemon cleaner or the clean wood smell she loved after mopping the floors.

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