She Tried to Take Her Sister’s House. Then the Driveway Changed-mdue - Chainityai

She Tried to Take Her Sister’s House. Then the Driveway Changed-mdue

At 5:06 in the morning, my younger sister walked into my kitchen and tried to evict me from the house I bought.

Rain was tapping the window over the sink, soft and steady, and my coffee had already gone lukewarm beside my laptop.

The screen still held a half-finished line of code, the cursor blinking in pale blue light like it was patiently waiting for me to come back.

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That hour was supposed to belong to me.

I had built my life around that hour.

Before my parents woke up.

Before work emails started.

Before medication schedules, utility bills, contractor calls, and all the small invisible responsibilities my family had somehow decided were mine.

Then the front door opened.

Not carefully.

Not like someone had forgotten to text first.

Confidently.

Like whoever turned the knob already believed the house belonged to them.

Christina stepped into my kitchen wearing a camel coat, black trousers, perfect makeup, and gold hoops that flashed beneath the pendant light.

My younger sister looked dressed for a client lunch, not a family ambush before sunrise.

Jonathan came in behind her and shut the door with a soft click.

He wore a navy wool coat and polished shoes.

His face had that calm, expensive look he used whenever he wanted something ugly to sound reasonable.

“Michelle,” Christina said, glancing around my kitchen. “You’re up.”

“It’s five,” I said. “I’m always up.”

Jonathan checked his watch.

“Five-oh-six.”

That tiny correction told me everything about the mood they had brought with them.

“What are you doing here?” I asked.

Christina did not answer right away.

She walked past me and touched the dining chair, the counter, the refrigerator handle.

Her fingertips dragged over my kitchen like she was taking inventory.

Like she was already deciding what would stay.

Jonathan placed a manila folder on the kitchen island.

The sound of it landing was soft.

Somehow it still hit harder than a slam.

Christina looked me straight in the eye.

“You have forty-eight hours,” she said. “Pack your things and get out. This house belongs to us now.”

For one second, I honestly thought I had misheard her.

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