She could disguise cruelty as something ordinary so well that, for a moment, you’d question whether you were the one overreacting.

“Be out by tomorrow,” she said from the doorway, one hand resting against the frame like she already owned the place more than I did.

The porch light glinted off her wedding ring.

Behind her stood my younger sister Lily and her husband Ethan, both wearing those carefully practiced expressions people use when they want to look kind while doing something selfish.

“Your sister and her family are moving in.

If you refuse, we’ll have you removed.”

Most people would expect I argued.

That I yelled or cried or demanded how my own mother could stand there and say something like that in a house I had spent the last three years holding together.

But I didn’t.

Instead, I looked past her into the living room.

My father’s leather chair still sat by the window.

The blanket I folded over its arm every morning was still in place.

The framed photo of him holding a string of fish from an old trip to a lake in Ohio still leaned slightly crooked on the mantel—because he always said perfectly straight pictures looked nervous.

Then I looked back at my mother and said, “Okay.”

Lily blinked in surprise. She had expected a fight.

It was obvious she came ready for drama, and my calm response left her with nothing to feed on.

“Don’t try anything, Ava,” my mother added, her tone sharpening.

“You have twenty-four hours.”

After they left, I stood in the hallway for a long time, listening to the quiet.

The old furnace clicked on.

A car passed outside.

The refrigerator hummed faintly in the kitchen.

Those sounds had been my life for three years.

Everything had narrowed down to that after my father got sick.

My dad, Henry Carter, had bought the house long before he married my mother.

It had belonged to his parents—a modest two-story place in Worthington, Ohio, just outside Columbus. It had creaky stairs, real wood trim, and a backyard that turned golden every October.

As a child, it felt ordinary.

Later, I realized how much of our family lived inside those walls.

Holidays. Arguments. Homework spread across the dining table.

Dad sanding window frames on summer weekends.

My mother criticizing everything without ever really fixing anything herself.

Lily had always been the favorite.

Beautiful, dramatic, always caught in some crisis that needed saving.