The locksmith, who was visibly trembling, admitted to the officers that my father had guaranteed him that he was the rightful owner.

I did not go back to my apartment that night because the memories of their intrusion felt too fresh and painful to face.

I stayed in the hotel room and watched the empty, quiet living room on my monitor until the sun began to rise over the city.

I foolishly thought that the worst part of the betrayal was over, but I was wrong about how far they were willing to go.

The following afternoon, a courier arrived at my hotel to serve me with a formal lawsuit from my own parents.

They were officially contesting my grandfather’s will, claiming that I was not the rightful owner of the home.

Now, they were attempting to use the legal system to steal my house in front of a judge and the entire city.

The lawsuit alleged that my grandfather Arthur was not of sound mind when he drafted the final version of his will.

It also implied that I had used undue influence and manipulation to coerce him into leaving me the Riverside Park property.

I read those cruel, fabricated lines while sitting in the hotel cafe, feeling a sense of cold courage that replaced my desire to cry.

I immediately contacted Leo Bennett, a high-profile attorney who specialized in complex inheritance law and family disputes.

He spent several days reviewing the will, Arthur’s medical records, the security footage, and the statements from the building staff.

After he finished reading the final document in the folder, he looked at me with a mixture of pity and professional resolve.

“They do not have a legitimate legal case, Elara, but they certainly have an incredible amount of audacity,” Leo remarked.

He was absolutely right, as my grandfather had been meticulous in ensuring that his final wishes were legally bulletproof.

The will explicitly stated that the apartment was intended solely for me, and Arthur’s primary physician had provided a certificate of lucidity.

Furthermore, the notary confirmed that Arthur had requested a private meeting to sign the papers specifically to avoid family pressure.

However, the final blow to my parents’ desperate plan came from an unexpected source: my cousin Maya.

During her formal deposition, Maya admitted that my mother had pressured her to help “clean out the apartment” before I could return.