My parents tried to push me out of “their investment property” — so I put the bank on speaker in front of them

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My Parents Tried Forcing Me Out Of “Their Investment Property” — So I Called The Bank

The smell of chlorine from my morning swim was still on my skin when I saw a stranger drilling into my front door lock. My mother was inside taking photos while my father supervised from the porch. He told me they were renting the place out because the market was up.

When he said the investors gave permission, not me, I did the only thing that would make them freeze. I pulled out my phone and called the bank. My name is Harper Thompson, and I’m thirty‑four years old.

I’ve lived in Aurora, Colorado, for four years, building a life that felt solitary but secure. Or at least I thought it was secure until I pulled into my driveway at ten in the morning on a Tuesday. The sky was that piercing high‑altitude blue that makes everything look sharper than it really is, but the scene in front of my front door didn’t need any extra clarity to look like a nightmare.

I turned off the ignition of my SUV. The silence of the engine cutting out was instantly replaced by a high‑pitched mechanical whining sound. It was the sound of metal eating into metal.

I stepped out, my gym bag heavy on my shoulder, the smell of chlorine from my morning laps still clinging to my skin and hair. My muscles were tired in that good, heavy way you feel after swimming two miles, but the adrenaline spike that hit me the second my boots touched the pavement erased all of that fatigue. There was a man kneeling at my front door.

He wore a utility vest and held a heavy‑duty power drill, and he was systematically destroying my deadbolt. That was shocking enough. But it was the audience standing three feet behind him that made my stomach drop through the concrete.

My mother, Marjorie Whitman, was holding her phone up, panning it slowly across the front porch and the entryway as if she were filming a segment for a lifestyle channel. She was wearing her Sunday church blazer, the beige one with the gold buttons. On a Tuesday morning.

Next to her stood my father, Dale. He had his arms crossed over his chest, his posture rigid and authoritative, nodding at the man with the drill like a foreman inspecting a construction site. And there was a third person, a man I didn’t recognize.

He looked slippery—the kind of man who wore a suit that was slightly too shiny and a smile that didn’t reach his eyes. He was holding a clipboard and tapping a pen against his chin, watching my mother film with an approving nod. I slammed my car door.

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