My Grandma Left Me Her Cottage Instead of My Cousin—Days Later I Came Home to Find It Completely Destroyed… What I Did Next Made Her Pay for Everything

I nodded. “You have no idea.”

A few days later, I picked out new furniture. Simple stuff: a beige loveseat, a small coffee table, and a cozy chair that reminded me of Gran’s old one. I arranged everything and stepped back to look. It felt right. It felt clean. But I still wasn’t at peace.

Paige’s words kept echoing in my head: “It should’ve been mine.”

And I realized she thought this was over.

She thought she could wreck what she didn’t get and just walk away.

That’s when I knew what I had to do next.

I didn’t call Paige after that. I didn’t confront her or try to reason with her. I knew she’d just twist it into something ugly.

Instead, I called a lawyer. A no-nonsense woman named Michelle with sharp eyes and a tone that said she’d handled worse.

After I told her everything, I showed her the photos on my phone: the trashed furniture, the paint-smeared bedroom, the piles of garbage. I handed over every receipt—for cleaning supplies, painters, and the furniture store.

Michelle looked through the papers slowly, then met my eyes.

“This is strong,” she said. “She won’t get out of this.”

“Even if she says it’s not her fault?” I asked.

“We’ve got photos, texts, and a motive. It’ll hold.”

It took a few weeks, but then I got the call. The court ruled in my favor. Paige was legally responsible for the damage. She had to pay me back for every penny I’d spent fixing Gran’s house.

That was the moment I smiled. For the first time since this nightmare started.

But I didn’t want to just send her the ruling. That felt too easy. I wanted her to feel the weight of what she’d done. I wanted her to see it, to know this was her mess—and she’d own it.

I bought a plain cardboard box and slipped the court papers into a large envelope. I added copies of the receipts. Then I tied the box with a bright pink ribbon and taped a small card to the top.

“From the home you destroyed.”

I drove to her house one evening just before sunset. Her car wasn’t in the driveway; she wasn’t home. I placed the box carefully on her porch, right in front of the door, and walked away.

I wasn’t even ten minutes down the road when my phone rang.

I picked up, calm as could be.

“WHAT IS THIS?!” Paige screamed, her voice shrill through the speaker.

“That’s a court order,” I said. “You’re responsible for the damage you caused. You’re paying for every trash bag I hauled, every wall I repainted, every pillow you ripped open. All of it.”

“You’re crazy!” she snapped. “You went to court over this?!”

“Yes, I did.”

She cursed, throwing out threats, calling me dramatic and obsessed.

“You think you’ve won?” she spat.

I paused, then answered quietly.

“No. Gran won. Because you didn’t take her house from me. And now you’ll pay for trying.”

Before she could reply, I hung up.

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