And I couldn’t get in.
That night, I drove home in silence.
When I arrived, I went straight to my filing cabinet.
The deed was still there.
My name.
Only mine.
Nothing had changed legally.
Only in how I was treated.
The next morning, I called my lawyer.
“They have no claim,” she told me. “None.”
That was when everything became clear.
I gave Lorraine one final chance.
I called and asked about visiting.
She told me to wait.
“Maybe August.”
Like I needed permission.
That was the moment I stopped hoping.
I listed the house for sale.
The market responded immediately.
Offers came in quickly.
I chose a couple who wanted a place for family—not status, not profit.
Something real.
We closed at the beginning of July.
The next day, Lorraine called.
Panicked.
“Mom, what happened? There are strangers at the house!”
“I sold it,” I said.
Silence.
Then anger.
“You can’t do that!”
“I can,” I replied calmly. “It was my house.”
I reminded her of everything.
The voicemail. The locks. The lawyer.
“I made space,” I said. “Just like you wanted.”
She cried.
I didn’t feel satisfaction.
Only clarity.
Later, David called.
His voice was soft.
“I think you did what you had to do.”
That mattered more than anything else.
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