Her Brother Demanded Her Farm Deed, But The Sale Was Already Done-nga9999 - Chainityai

Her Brother Demanded Her Farm Deed, But The Sale Was Already Done-nga9999

The email hit my inbox at 7:08 on a Tuesday morning.

The packing shed still smelled like cut lavender, damp cardboard, and the first pot of coffee I had burned because I forgot it on the warmer.

Outside, the wind moved through the purple rows with a dry whisper that sounded almost like paper rubbing together.

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Gravel popped under my boots when I stepped closer to the open door for better light and read my brother’s message twice.

“Stop playing with dirt, Sienna. You have 72 hours to vacate the property. Mom is coming to collect the deed. Don’t make this harder than it has to be.”

That was Garrett.

My older brother had always known how to make cruelty sound like an appointment.

He was the polished child, the one my parents mentioned at dinner parties before anyone had even asked about him.

Garrett had the MBA, the New York job, and the $847,000 luxury apartment my father bought him with the same casual pride most parents reserve for a framed diploma.

I had the farm.

Or what my father called the farm, back when it was still twelve acres of hard, weed-choked land and a house that looked one winter away from folding in on itself.

When I graduated with top honors in Environmental Science, Douglas handed me the deed across his desk like he was tossing me an old receipt.

“Take this barren dirt,” he said. “At least you can’t ruin anything important there.”

My mother, Vivien, did not laugh.

That almost made it worse.

She simply adjusted the bracelet on her wrist and looked out the window, as if the decision had already been made in a room where I was not important enough to sit.

The house on that land was a rotting 1978 shack with no heat and no hot water.

The porch sagged.

The bathroom pipes froze.

The kitchen cabinets smelled like mice and old rain.

That first winter, I slept in two hoodies with socks on my hands when my gloves wore through.

I worked fourteen-hour days, then did remote data entry at night just to pay the county tax bill.

Some nights, the laptop screen blurred because I was so tired I could not remember whether I had eaten dinner.

I fixed pipes with YouTube videos playing on a cracked screen.

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