I stepped off the plane after eleven years away, my carry-on holding more legal paperwork than clothes. Mom opened the door with tears in her eyes. Her new husband greeted me with his fist.
“Welcome home,” he slurred, bourbon heavy on his breath.
The sting across my face wasn’t what hurt most. It was seeing Mom look away, pretending not to notice.
They called me cold, calculating, ungrateful. Maybe they were right.
But I had something they didn’t expect: the original deed papers they thought were lost forever—and a very good lawyer on speed dial.
My name is Clare Mat, and I hadn’t set foot in Ohio for eleven years.
Not since the day I packed everything I owned into two suitcases and caught a Greyhound to New York with my military scholarship papers and a promise to myself that I’d never look back.
The call came on a Tuesday afternoon while I was reviewing audit reports in my Manhattan office—my grandmother’s voice, paper-thin but steady.
“Your grandfather passed, Clare. The memorial is Saturday. You need to come home.”
I almost said no.
I would have, if she hadn’t added, “You need to see this with your own eyes.”
The flight from LaGuardia to Columbus took two hours—two hours to undo eleven years of carefully maintained distance. I rented a car at the airport, muscle memory guiding me through the familiar streets of my hometown.
Everything looked smaller than I remembered: the houses, the trees, even the high school where I’d graduated valedictorian before enlisting.
The house sat on Maple Street, same as always—white siding, black shutters, wraparound porch—but the mailbox read Carlton now, not Mat.
My mother had taken Rick’s name when they married three years ago. She’d sent me an invitation.
I’d sent my regrets and a check.
I parked across the street and sat for a moment, studying the place where I’d grown up. The garden my father had planted was gone, replaced with gravel. The basketball hoop he’d installed for my thirteenth birthday had vanished.
Even the old oak tree looked different, half its branches missing—probably deemed too close to Rick’s precious garage addition.
My phone buzzed. A text from my assistant:
Legal documents uploaded to secure folder as requested. Good luck, Claire.
I grabbed my bag and crossed the street.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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