My Brother Wanted Dad’s House, Then Someone Burst Through The Door-heyily

My name is Captain Linda Morse, and I was thirty-three years old when my own brother tried to take our father’s house from me by putting his knee into my ribs on the oak floor Dad had installed with his own hands.

It happened three days after we buried Arthur Morse.

The house on Washington Avenue still smelled like funeral lilies, lemon oil, and coffee that had been sitting too long in paper cups.

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Rain tapped the front windows in a steady little rhythm, the kind of sound that usually made Dad turn down the TV and say the yard needed it.

That afternoon, it only made the living room feel smaller.

Foil casserole trays crowded the kitchen counters.

There was a pan of baked ziti from Mrs. Keller next door, green beans from a woman at Dad’s church, rolls wrapped in aluminum foil, and a stack of paper plates nobody had touched.

People had come through that house for two days with hugs, casseroles, stories, and sad smiles.

Then they left.

Once the last car pulled away from the curb, silence settled into every room like dust.

Damian took Dad’s brown recliner.

He did not ask.

He just sat in it, leaned back, and rubbed two fingers across his jaw like he was about to run a business meeting.

My brother was forty, broad-shouldered, and dressed in a gray quarter-zip sweater that looked too clean for that house.

He had an expensive haircut, polished shoes, and the calm voice he used whenever he wanted strangers to think he was reasonable.

His wife, Sarah, stood by the sideboard in a black blouse, scrolling on her phone.

Her gold hoops caught the hallway light every time she turned her head.

She had barely cried at the funeral.

I had noticed, then told myself not to judge people for how they grieved.

By that afternoon, I understood she had not been grieving at all.

Damian looked around the living room, at Dad’s recliner, the old family photos, the framed picture of my mother, the coffee table with the corner chipped from when I was nine.

Then he said, “We need to be practical.”

I almost laughed, but there was nothing funny in his face.

Practical.

That word had followed me through hospitals, banks, and family emergencies.

Practical was what people said when they wanted cruelty to sound mature.

I stayed near the dining room doorway with my arms folded because I did not trust my hands not to shake.

Sarah lifted her phone to her ear.

“No, I said sell it,” she told someone, speaking at normal volume like I was not right there.

She paused, listened, then added, “I’m not waiting six months because his daughter is emotional.”

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