The Foreclosure Letter Had My Name on It—But My Sister Was the One Living in the House-luna

The phone kept ringing.

I stared at Cass’s name until the screen blurred.

For one second, I almost answered the way I always had. Fast. Guilty. Like her emergency automatically belonged to me.

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But my hands were still shaking over the police report confirmation page.

Submitted.

That single word sat on my laptop screen like a line I could never uncross.

Cass called again.

Then my mother.

Then my father.

That was how I knew Cass had already told them.

Not the truth, probably. Cass never started with the truth. She started with the version that made her sound cornered by someone cruel.

I let all three calls go to voicemail.

My apartment was suddenly too quiet.

The dishwasher had stopped. The coffee had gone cold. The foreclosure letter sat open on the kitchen table like it owned the room.

I clicked into my email.

The bank documents had arrived.

There were scans of forms I had never seen. A driver’s license copy. A signature page. Closing disclosures. Mortgage terms.

And there it was again.

My name.

My fake signature.

Cass’s email address.

I opened the property file and searched the address.

The house loaded slowly, photo by photo.

Stone front. Black shutters. Wide driveway. Two-car garage. White kitchen with bright lights and an island big enough for a family to gather around.

Cass had posted photos from that kitchen.

I remembered them.

She had captioned one, “Finally home.”

I had even liked it.

My stomach turned so hard I pushed the laptop away.

Then a text came from Mom.

Don’t do anything dramatic. Your sister is crying.

Not: Are you okay?

Not: Did she really do this?

Not: We’re coming over.

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