The goal wasn’t to destroy him out of spite. The goal was to get him out of my house and my life.
But I needed leverage. I needed him to be more afraid of what was waiting for him outside my door than he was angry about leaving.
I powered down my laptop.
The house was quiet now. The guests had likely left. The festive atmosphere shattered.
I changed into comfortable clothes, brushed my teeth in the small bathroom attached to the office, and unfolded the sleeper sofa I kept for when I worked late.
I wouldn’t sleep in my bedroom tonight. I wouldn’t give them the chance for a late-night heart-to-heart ambush at my bedside.
As I lay in the dark, listening to the unfamiliar creaks of the house at night, I realized something.
For the first time since they’d moved in, I felt in control.
The house felt like mine again.
The silence wasn’t oppressive. It was peaceful.
He could have the seat at the table. I was reclaiming the whole damn house.
Tomorrow, I would hand them the notice with Mr. Ays as my witness. And then I would wait, because people like Richard—when cornered—don’t go quietly. They lash out. They make mistakes.
And I would be ready.
The next morning, December 26th, dawned brittle and bright. I woke up on the office sofa with a stiff neck and crystal-clear purpose. I showered in the small bathroom, dressed in simple professional clothes—dark jeans, a crisp sweater—and braided my hair back tightly.
I looked calm, composed, and unmovable. The reflection in the mirror was a stranger, and I liked her.
I could hear them moving around in the kitchen: the low murmur of my mother’s voice, the defensive boom of Richard’s, no sound from Bianca.
I made coffee in the office’s small machine, the rich smell of private luxury.
At 9:55 a.m., I unlocked my door and stepped into the hallway. The conversation in the kitchen died instantly. All three of them were at the table—my kitchen table—surrounded by the wreckage of last night’s meal.
They looked like they hadn’t slept. My mother’s eyes were puffy. Richard’s face was set in a familiar mask of aggrieved authority. Bianca just looked bored, scrolling through her phone.
“Cleo,” my mother began, rising halfway out of her chair. “Good, you’re up. Let’s sit and talk like adults.”
“There’s nothing to discuss,” I said, my voice even.
I walked past them to the front door, unlocked it, and opened it wide. The cold morning air rushed in.
“What are you doing?” Richard snapped. “It’s freezing.”
Mr. Aerys was already walking up my front path, neat in a wool coat and scarf, a kind, concerned look on his face.
“Morning, Cleo,” he said, stepping inside. He gave a polite nod to my stunned family.
“Linda. Richard,” my mother said, confused. “What? What’s going on?”
“Mr. Aerys is here as an independent witness,” I explained.
I picked up the folder I’d left on the hall console. I pulled out three copies of the formal notice to vacate and three copies of the highlighted rental agreement clause.
“As you were notified via email last night, and as per Section 4B of the rental agreement you signed, you have 72 hours from official in-person delivery of this notice to vacate the premises. That deadline is 10:00 a.m. on December 29th.”
I placed one set of documents in front of my mother, one in front of Richard, and kept the third.
“Mr. Ays can confirm the time, date, and delivery.”
My mother stared at the paper as if it were written in another language.
Richard’s face flushed a deep, dangerous red. He didn’t touch the notice.
“You ungrateful little—” he hissed, the mask slipping completely. “After everything we’ve done for you, after we took you in—”
“You live in my house, Richard,” I said, not raising my voice. “You have for six months. You pay $400 a month for a room that would rent for $1,600. This isn’t a discussion. It’s a legal notification.”
He stood up so fast his chair screeched.
“This is family. You don’t use legal nonsense with family. You tear this up right now and apologize.”
Mr. Aerys cleared his throat. “Richard, I’m here just to observe, but I have to say—I heard the commotion last night. This seems a fair course of action given the circumstances.”
Richard turned on him. “This is none of your business, old man. Get out of my house.”
“It’s Cleo’s house,” Mr. Era said gently but firmly. “The deed is in her name. I’ve seen it.”
That truth, voiced by an outsider, seemed to physically strike Richard. He flinched.
Bianca finally put her phone down, her boredom replaced by a dawning alarm.
“Dad, what is this?”
“It’s nothing, baby,” he said, trying to smooth his voice. “It’s just Cleo throwing another tantrum. She’ll get over it.”
He looked back at me, his eyes pleading and furious at the same time.
“Cleo, be reasonable. Where will we go? It’s the holidays. You’re really going to make your mother homeless?”
It was the same emotional blackmail, the same worn-out script, but the audience was different now.
I didn’t take the bait.
“Your living arrangements are not my responsibility,” I stated. “You have 72 hours. I expect you to pack your belongings and leave the keys. If you are not out by the deadline, I will file for an expedited eviction with the sheriff’s office. The email from my attorney contains the next steps.”
My mother finally found her voice, a thin, reedy sound.
“You have an attorney? When did you get an attorney? Why are you doing this to us?”
I looked at her. Really looked at her. The woman who chose peace over protecting her own daughter, time and time again.
“I’m doing this because last night your husband told me I wasn’t his real family and physically removed me from my own table. The why is him. The how is me finally deciding I deserve better.”
I turned to Mr. Aerys. “Thank you for your time. I believe we’re done here.”
He nodded. “I’ve witnessed the delivery at 10:07 a.m. on December 26th. You have my number if you need a statement, Cleo.”
He gave my mother a sad, sympathetic look that she didn’t deserve and left.
The door closed, leaving the four of us in a ringing silence.
Then Richard erupted. He snatched up the notice and tore it in half, then in half again, scattering the pieces.
“There. It’s gone. Now we’re going to sit down and you are going to explain what game you think you’re playing.”
I didn’t react to the torn paper.
“I have copies and a digital record. Tearing it up doesn’t change the law, Richard. It just shows the court you were properly served and chose to act in bad faith.”
The word court finally pierced Bianca’s bubble.
“Court? What court? Dad, what’s happening?”
“Your sister is trying to scare us,” he blustered.
But the confidence was leaking away. He was a salesman with no product, a king with no kingdom, and the walls were closing in.
“72 hours,” I repeated.
I walked to the kitchen, took my favorite mug from the cupboard—the one Bianca always used—and poured myself the last of the fresh coffee.
I walked past them back to my office.
Just before I closed the door, I heard my mother start to cry and Richard’s voice low and desperate.
“Don’t worry, Linda. I’ll handle this. She can’t do this. I’ll call. I’ll make some calls.”
I locked the door, sat at my desk, and opened my laptop.
I had one more call to make myself. It was time to bring in the professional.
I opened my contacts and found the number for Leah’s boss, a no-nonsense real estate attorney named Susan Gray. I hit dial.
While the phone rang, I opened my draft folder and looked at the unsent email to the printing company. I still didn’t send it, but I opened a new tab.
I navigated to the website for the local sheriff’s civil division. I found the forms for a landlord-tenant complaint. I began to fill them out, my fingers flying over the keys.
The game wasn’t scaring them. The game was being so prepared, so methodical, so untouchably calm that their chaos had nowhere to land.







