My Dad Let His Girlfriend Steal My House, Until The Deed Spoke-nhu9999 - Chainityai

My Dad Let His Girlfriend Steal My House, Until The Deed Spoke-nhu9999

My father’s girlfriend did not steal my house all at once.

She started with the light.

My mother, Janet Harlo, had kept the living room bright because she said a house needed to know the day was still happening. After she died, that room became the only place where I could sit and feel like she had not been erased completely.

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Then Marlene hung burgundy curtains over the windows.

Heavy ones.

The kind that made afternoon look like punishment.

My father, Dennis, watched her do it from his recliner and said nothing. He had become very good at saying nothing. He had practiced it through my mother’s illness, through the years before it, through every dinner where she tried to make conversation with a man who had already left without packing.

I was twenty-nine, working remotely as a systems analyst, and the house was legally mine. My mother had made sure of that two years before the cancer. She had sat me at the kitchen table with a folder of documents: recorded deed, title insurance, tax records, mortgage statements, utilities.

“Your father knows,” she told me. “He just won’t remember, because remembering would require him to act.”

She was right.

She was almost always right.

After the funeral, I kept my apartment but worked from the house most days. The spare room had been her office, and sitting at her desk felt less like moving backward than standing guard. I could see her garden from the window. Empty beds. Brown soil. Tomato stakes waiting for hands that were gone.

Marlene arrived three months after the funeral with one suitcase, one garment bag, and the smile of a woman already measuring walls.

“Trevor,” my father said, “this is Marlene. She’ll be staying with us for a while.”

With us.

In my house.

I shook her hand and felt how firm it was. Not friendly. Claiming.

The first week, she moved my mother’s reading chair out of the window. The second week, she emptied the china cabinet. My grandmother’s Wedgwood, forty-three pieces wrapped by my mother in tissue paper after every Thanksgiving, vanished before breakfast.

Marlene told me it was in the garage.

It was not in the garage.

It was in the dumpster.

I pulled the bag out and found cracked plates inside, pink strawberry pattern split through the middle, tissue still clinging to ceramic like bandages. When I told my father, he did not get up.

“She’s reorganizing,” he said. “The house needed updating.”

That sentence taught me something important. Marlene did not need to convince my father. She only needed to give him a way not to choose.

Soon the Wi-Fi password changed. Then my mail started disappearing. Bank statements. Insurance notices. A certified letter from my mother’s estate attorney. I installed a doorbell camera facing the mailbox, and within a week I had footage of Marlene collecting the mail, sorting it at the kitchen table, and sliding my envelopes into a drawer in the hallway credenza.

I did not confront her.

I made a file.

I called it Project Marlene because sometimes anger needs a folder before it can become useful.

Video evidence.

Mail tampering.

Property damage.

Financial interference.

I timestamped everything. I backed it up. I cross-referenced dates, clips, and photos the way I did at work, because data has one beautiful quality: it does not care who cries louder.

Then a rent notice appeared on the spare room door.

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