“Henry and I made sure this house would always be mine to live in. Always.”
Arnold added quietly, “And any attempt to remove her, pressure her, or treat her as anything less than the legal resident of this property…”
He tapped the paper once. “…would be considered a violation.”
One of Valerie’s friends shifted uncomfortably.
Another stood up. The room that had laughed an hour ago now felt too small. Valerie’s voice came out sharper.
“So what, you’re kicking us out?”
I held her gaze. “I’m correcting something.”
The driver knocked lightly at the open door. “Ma’am,” he said to me, “where would you like us to start?”
I didn’t look away from Valerie.
“Upstairs,” I said. “Master bedroom first.”
That was when it hit her. Not the words.
The meaning. Because for the first time since she walked into this house…
She understood it had never been hers. “Stella, wait,” she said quickly.
“We can talk about this.”
“We did talk,” I replied. “This morning.”
Her eyes flickered toward her friends. Toward the table.
Toward the half-eaten breakfast she had turned into a performance. “I didn’t mean it like that,” she said. I almost smiled.
“You meant it exactly like that.”
Arnold stepped aside as the movers began walking in, calm and efficient, carrying empty boxes and quiet authority. One of Valerie’s friends grabbed her purse. “I think I should go,” she muttered.
Another followed. Because scenes like that don’t stay funny when the power shifts. Valerie stood there alone now.
For the first time…
Without an audience. “Where are we supposed to go?” she asked. I picked up the coffee pot from the counter.
Poured myself a cup. Warm. Steady.
“Somewhere else,” I said. Then I took a sip. Because after forty years of building a life in that house…
I wasn’t asking for my place anymore.
I was simply taking it back.
