Three years after inheriting my grandmother’s house, my father remarried and suddenly decided the property should have been his. A week after the wedding, he and his new wife moved in without asking. At first, I stayed quiet to avoid damaging my relationship with him. But his wife quickly began treating the house as her own, replacing decorations, rearranging furniture, and throwing away things that meant a lot to me—including my favorite sofa and a vintage desk.
When I confronted her, she insisted she was only “improving” the house and accused me of being territorial. After several conversations went nowhere, I stopped arguing. Instead, whenever my dad was away, I quietly reversed her changes. Furniture shifted back, picture frames moved, and decorations mysteriously returned to their original places. Slowly, she began feeling like the house itself was resisting her.
Then I added a few reminders of my grandmother. Her rocking chair appeared in different rooms. Her reading glasses turned up in unexpected places. Her old jewelry box sat open on a dresser. Soon, my father’s wife started complaining that things kept moving on their own, but he dismissed her concerns and said she was imagining it.
The final straw came when I walked silently past the living room wearing my grandmother’s shawl while she was redecorating. She screamed, convinced she had seen a ghost. When she described the figure, I acted confused and mentioned that it sounded exactly like my grandmother’s shawl. By the end of the night, she was convinced the house was haunted and refused to stay another day. Soon after, she and my father moved out, leaving me alone in the home my grandmother had wanted me to have all along