My name’s Rachel. I’m 19, and last fall, my world fell apart when my parents died in a car crash. One minute they were alive, heading to dinner, and the next, I was standing in a sterile hallway at 3 a.m., clutching cheap coffee, praying it was all a nightmare.
After the funeral, the house felt hollow. I barely left my room. It was just me, grief, and the silence. Then came the will reading.
I went in expecting closure. Instead, the lawyer announced, “The house will be passed on to Ms. Dina.” My aunt. My dad’s estranged sister. The same woman who never cared enough to visit us when my parents were alive.
Dina smiled, venom dripping from her voice: “You heard him. It’s my house now.”
I couldn’t breathe. I protested, begged for an explanation, but the lawyer only shrugged, saying the will was signed and valid.
Two days later, Dina came to the house. She looked at me, smirking, and said:
“You’ve got one day to get out of my house.”
I pleaded. I offered to help with bills. She waved me off like I was nothing. That night, she sprawled on the couch with chips in hand, yelling, “Move, you’re blocking the TV,” while I packed my entire life into bags.
The next morning, I stepped outside with tears in my eyes. That’s when I saw it: a black limousine parked at the curb. I thought it was a mistake, but then the door opened, and someone inside called my name.
I turned and gasped.
Sitting inside was Mr. Callahan—my father’s old business partner. He looked at me with kind eyes and said, “Rachel, your parents left me something for you. Something they didn’t trust anyone else with. Get in.”
I hesitated, then slid into the seat. He handed me a sealed envelope, worn at the edges. Inside was a second will. The real one. My parents had left the house—and everything in it—to me. Dina’s will was forged.
The lawyer confirmed it the very same day. Within a week, Dina was dragged into court. Her smug smile disappeared as she faced charges for fraud.
And me? I walked back into my parents’ house—not as a guest, not as a frightened girl—but as the rightful owner.
For the first time since the accident, I felt like they were still with me, protecting me even after death.