They did exactly that. The next morning, Violet posted smiling selfies beside my car with captions celebrating her “new chapter,” while my mother hired a locksmith and illegally changed the locks on a house she did not legally own. By evening, Violet invited friends over, filmed videos inside my living room beneath my father’s portrait, drank my wine, wore my coats, and publicly announced online that I had suffered a mental breakdown. I saved every post, every video, and every single photograph.
On the third day, my attorney Marcus Hale arrived at my hotel carrying a leather folder full of evidence. The second he saw the burn covering my cheek, his expression changed completely. He asked whether I wanted to press criminal charges, but I calmly told him I wanted them to understand exactly what they had tried to steal from me. Marcus opened the folder and showed me everything already prepared: the deed to the house, trust documents, medical records, security footage, locksmith statements, and evidence of property misuse and defamation.
The house had never belonged to my mother. Six years earlier, my father quietly transferred it solely into my name through his estate. After his death, grief kept me silent while guilt kept me patient. My mother confused that patience for weakness. Violet mistook it for invisibility. Neither of them realized I had simply been waiting for the moment they crossed a line serious enough that mercy no longer made sense.
Marcus asked if he should move quickly. I touched the necklace my father left me and quietly answered yes. “They won’t expect it,” he warned carefully. I looked out across the city lights and said something that made him smile faintly. “No,” I replied softly. “They never really saw me at all- 