My family kicked me out for buying an $800 house instead of paying for my sister’s retreat. Mom sneered, “Enjoy living like junk.”

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My family threw me out because I chose to buy an $800 house instead of paying for my sister’s retreat.
Mom sneered, “Enjoy living like junk.”

Now they want a piece of it……

The pounding on my front door began at 11:43 p.m., loud enough to rattle dust loose from the warped ceiling beams. I froze midway across the living room, phone in one hand, flashlight in the other, staring at the deadbolt as if it might give way.

“Open this door, Leah!” my mother shouted from the porch. “You think you can steal from this family and hide in this dump?”

Behind her, something slammed against the siding.

My sister Rachel’s voice cut through, sharp and breathless. “She’s in there. I saw her car.”

I stepped back, heart racing.

The house had cost me eight hundred dollars in cash at a county tax auction—a sagging place outside Millfield, Ohio, with cracked windows, stained floors, and a roof that groaned whenever the wind picked up. My family had laughed when I bought it instead of helping pay for Rachel’s “healing retreat” in Sedona.

Mom had stood in her pristine kitchen, arms crossed, and sneered, “Enjoy living like junk.”

So I did. I scrubbed away the mold, patched the leaks, slept on an air mattress, and kept my distance.

For three quiet months, no one reached out.

When I said yes, the color drained from his face.

“Then don’t let your family in,” he muttered. “Not tonight.”

Now they were here.

My phone buzzed with an unknown number.

DO NOT OPEN THE FLOOR IN THE KITCHEN. THEY KNOW.

Another crash hit the front door.

The frame splintered.

Rachel shouted, “She found it before us, I know she did!”

Found what?

I ran toward the kitchen anyway, the flashlight beam bouncing across the peeling linoleum, just as the porch light flared through the broken front window—and a floorboard near the sink suddenly lifted from below with a violent crack.

I had thought my family came to humiliate me again. I was wrong. The moment the floor opened, I understood this house wasn’t just cheap—it was hiding something people were willing to destroy my life to get.

The board snapped upward so hard it nearly struck my knees.

I stumbled back, grabbing the counter as a square of darkness opened beneath the kitchen floor. Cold air rushed out, carrying the scent of damp earth and something metallic.

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