She Came Home To Find Her Sister’s In-Laws Living In Her House-heyily

Amanda Blake knew something was wrong before she reached her front steps.

The rain had stopped ten minutes earlier, but the street still shone under the porch lights, and the tires of the rideshare whispered through shallow puddles as it turned onto her quiet Portland block.

She had been gone three days.

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Dallas, two client meetings, one hotel room that smelled like lemon cleaner and old carpet, one delayed flight, and one paper coffee cup that had gone cold somewhere over Colorado.

All she wanted was her house.

Her own porch.

Her own shower.

Her own bed with the quilt folded at the foot and the soft creak in the floorboards she had stopped noticing because it belonged to her.

Then she saw the minivan in her driveway.

It was silver, dented near the back bumper, and parked crookedly enough that one tire touched the grass she had reseeded herself the spring before.

Amanda sat still in the back seat.

The driver glanced at her in the mirror and asked, “This the right place?”

“It is,” Amanda said.

But her eyes had already moved to the porch.

Two lawn chairs sat there.

Not hers.

One had a faded green cushion.

The other had a fast-food cup still sitting in its holder.

Beside her front door was a pair of men’s work boots with dried mud along the soles.

Amanda paid for the ride, stepped out, and pulled her suitcase behind her.

The wheels scraped over the driveway.

She remembered the first time she had walked up that path with a realtor, seven years younger and so nervous she could barely make herself speak.

Back then, the white craftsman had needed paint, a new water heater, and more confidence than Amanda had.

She bought it anyway.

She spent years skipping vacations and eating leftovers at her desk because every dollar had a destination.

Some went to the mortgage.

Some went to the emergency fund.

Some went to the porch railing she painted herself while Melissa sat in a lawn chair and joked that Amanda worked too much.

Back then, Amanda had laughed.

Back then, she still thought her sister’s jokes were harmless.

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