My sister taped a notice to the kitchen table, raising my rent from $2,350 to $7,100 and giving me 30 days to move out, then leaned back in her chair and smiled while my parents called it ‘fair’ as if I were a stranger but I didn’t beg, I didn’t scream, I didn’t even blink. I just took my grandmother’s sealed envelope out of the drawer, opened the inside, and watched their faces change.

My sister walked into the apartment I managed and tossed a rent-increase letter onto my kitchen table, tripling the price from $2,350 to $7,100.

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My parents called it fair—but they didn’t know that beneath my fingernails was still a faint stain of ink from the final initials I’d put on the pages my grandmother left me.

The entire building was mine.

And I’d been preparing for this moment in silence for three years.

My name is Claire Maddox, and I’ve spent the last six years managing Maple Glenn Apartments, a modest but well-kept building in the heart of Portland. At thirty-four, I wasn’t exactly where I thought I’d be in life, but I’d found purpose here—keeping things running smoothly, making sure our elderly residents had working heaters in winter, making sure the young families could raise their kids in a safe, clean place without constantly looking over their shoulders.

The morning Sabrina showed up changed everything.

I was in my ground-floor office reviewing maintenance requests when I heard the distinctive click of her designer heels on the lobby’s worn marble.

My older sister had that effect. Her presence announced itself before she even entered a room.

Through my office window, I watched her stride past Mrs. Rodriguez and her granddaughter without a glance.

Her tailored suit was as sharp as her ambition.

“Claire,” she said, not bothering to knock as she pushed into my office, “we need to talk.”

Sabrina had always been the golden child—Yale Law, partnership track at thirty-two, a brownstone in the nice part of town. And me? Community college, a property-management certificate, and a one-bedroom in the building I managed.

I’d never minded the comparison until today.

She placed a manila envelope on my desk with the kind of practiced precision she probably used in courtrooms.

“The family had a meeting last weekend about Maple Glenn.”

“What meeting?” I set down my coffee mug, noting the way she said the family as if I wasn’t part of it.

“I wasn’t invited to any meeting.”

“It was an investor discussion.” She adjusted her pearl necklace—the one Grandma Edith had given her for law school graduation. “Mom, Dad, myself, and Uncle Richard… we’ve been reviewing the building’s financials.”

My stomach tightened.

“The building’s financials are fine. We’re at ninety-five percent occupancy.

Maintenance is up to date.”

“The market’s hot, Claire.” She cut me off with a wave of her manicured hand. “Properties in this neighborhood are selling for three times what they were worth five years ago. We’re hemorrhaging opportunity cost.”

I stared at her.

“Hemorrhaging opportunity cost?

These are people’s homes, Sabrina.”

“It’s a business asset.” She tapped the envelope. “Which brings me to why I’m here. Effective next month, we’re implementing new rental rates to align with market standards.”

My hands stayed steady as I opened the envelope.

My mind didn’t.

The letter inside was printed on Sabrina’s law firm letterhead.

Of course it was.

My eyes scanned down to the numbers, and I had to read them twice.

$7,100.

My voice came out strangled.

“My rent is going from $2,350 to $7,100.”

“Your below-market rate was a courtesy extended by Grandma Edith.” Sabrina’s tone was clinical, detached. “But we can’t run a business on sentiment. Every unit paying below market rate is money left on the table.”

“This is triple what I’m paying now.”

“Actually, it’s 3.02 times your current rate.” She smiled—actually smiled.

“But don’t worry. As family, we’re giving you sixty days instead of the standard thirty. Dad insisted.”

I thought of Ruth Saunders in 3B, who’d lived here for fifteen years.

The Nwen family in 2A with their new baby. Old Mr. Petrov, who fed the stray cats behind the building like it was a sacred duty.

“What about everyone else?” I asked.

“Are you raising their rents too?”

“Market-rate adjustments across the board.” She pulled out her phone, already moving on to her next task. “Those who can afford to stay will stay. Those who can’t—” she shrugged “—will find housing within their means.”

“They’ll be homeless.”

She looked up from her screen, and for a moment I saw something flicker in her eyes—annoyance, disdain.

“This is the real world, Claire.

Grandma coddled you, letting you play property manager, keeping rents artificially low. But she’s been gone three years now, and it’s time to maximize the asset’s potential.”

“Grandma cared about people.”

“Grandma was from a different era.” Sabrina stood, smoothing her skirt. “The vote was unanimous.

Claire, Mom and Dad agree. It’s what’s best for the family’s financial future.”

The words hit like a physical blow.

Mom and Dad voted for this.

“They understand business,” Sabrina added, like it was supposed to comfort me.

She moved toward the door, then paused.

“Oh—and we’ll need you to distribute the notices to all residents by end of week. As property manager, that’s still your job.

For now.”

The threat in those last two words wasn’t subtle.

“Sabrina… please.” I forced the plea past my pride. “Can we talk about this? Maybe a smaller increase.”

“There’s nothing to discuss.” She turned back, and the smile on her face was the same one she’d worn when she beat me at Monopoly as kids, when she got into Yale while I was waitressing, when she bought her brownstone while I was still renting.

“It’s just business, Claire.

Don’t take it personally.”

The door clicked shut behind her, leaving me alone with the letter that would destroy everything I’d worked to maintain.

I sank into my chair, staring at the numbers that seemed to grow larger the longer I looked.

$7,100.

More than most of my residents made in a month.

I thought about calling my parents, but what was the point? They’d already chosen their side—voted to support Sabrina’s plan without even telling me there was a meeting.

The family had decided, and I wasn’t really family.

I was just the little sister who managed the building, whose below-market rent had been a courtesy they could no longer afford to extend.

My phone buzzed.

A text from Sabrina.

Notices need to go out by Friday. Template attached.

Don’t forget to include yours. 🙂

That emoji—that damn smiling emoji—summed up everything.

This wasn’t just business to her.

She was enjoying this. Enjoying putting me in my place.

Enjoying the power she held.

I looked around my small office—the maintenance schedules I’d carefully organized, the birthday calendar where I tracked every resident’s special day, the thank-you cards pinned to my bulletin board from families I’d helped over the years.

Six years of my life.

Building a community.

Creating a home for people who needed one.

And with a single vote I wasn’t even invited to participate in, my own family had decided to tear it all down.

But as I sat there, something Grandma Edith used to say echoed in my mind:

The truth has a way of surfacing, Claire. Just like cream in coffee—you can stir all you want, but it always rises to the top.

I pulled open my desk drawer, looking for tissues, and my fingers brushed against something I’d forgotten was there—a small key on a faded ribbon.

Grandma’s safe deposit key.

I’d been meaning to go through her remaining papers, but I’d never found the time.

Maybe now was exactly the right time.

Standing up, I pocketed the key and looked once more at the rent-increase letter.

Sabrina thought she’d won.

Thought she’d put me in my place once and for all.

My parents thought they were making a smart business decision.

But Grandma Edith had loved this building. She’d loved these people.

She wouldn’t have left things this simple, this cruel.

She’d been too smart for that.

And as I locked my office door and headed for the bank, I couldn’t shake the feeling that Grandma had one more surprise waiting—one

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