
Part 2 of 3
Chloe appeared next, lugging a stack of folded cardboard boxes and wearing enormous designer sunglasses to hide her face.
My cousin Maya was also part of the group, looking incredibly uncomfortable as she clutched several empty shopping bags.
The locksmith knelt down in front of my door and began working on the lock with practiced, efficient movements.
I felt something fundamental break inside my soul when the heavy metal lock finally gave way and the door swung open.
It wasn’t just a piece of hardware that had been compromised; it was the final boundary of my life being violated by people I should have been able to trust.
They entered my sanctuary with a sense of entitlement that was truly staggering to witness through the camera lens.
“Work quickly,” my father ordered in a sharp voice, “we need to clear out the bedrooms first and remove all the clothes and personal papers.”
“The real estate photographer will be arriving tomorrow morning, and I want this place looking like a model home,” he added.
My mother went straight to my grandfather’s private study, while Chloe ran toward my bedroom with a predatory look in her eyes.
I watched in horror as Chloe flung open my closet doors and began pulling out my dresses as if they were nothing more than worthless rags.
She paused to hold a silk evening gown against her body and admired her reflection in my full-length mirror.
“Oh, this color actually suits me much better than it ever suited Elara,” she said with a cruel, high-pitched laugh.
Maya did not join in the laughter; she remained standing by the front door, looking pale and deeply troubled by the situation.
I picked up the hotel phone and dialed the police, providing the dispatcher with my existing case report number.
“The intruders are already inside the premises,” I said with a voice that was surprisingly steady, “they are looting my home right now.”
The emergency operator instructed me to stay exactly where I was and warned me not to approach the building for my own safety.
On the screen, I saw my mother pick up a framed photograph from the bookshelf that showed me and my grandfather on my graduation day.
She stared at it for a few seconds with a grimace, then carelessly tossed it into a large cardboard box filled with junk.
The sound of the glass shattering was picked up by the microphone, but my mother didn’t even bother to look down at the damage.
My father was standing by the large window, pacing back and forth as he talked loudly into his mobile phone.
“Yes, the Riverside Park apartment is officially available for viewing starting today, and we can list it on the premium market by the weekend,” he said.
“The legal owner is currently out of the country for an extended period, but this is a private family matter that has been settled,” he lied smoothly.
I realized then that I had spent my entire life being treated as a secondary character whose space could be emptied whenever Chloe needed more room.
Chloe then wandered into the study and discovered my grandfather’s hand-carved wooden box where he kept his most personal treasures.
She opened the lid and smiled broadly when she saw his vintage gold watches and the antique medals he had won in his youth.
I felt a surge of adrenaline and was tempted to sprint toward the building to stop her from touching those sacred items.
But at that exact moment, a thunderous, authoritative knock echoed through the apartment and vibrated through the speakers.
“This is the police! Open the door immediately and step away from the personal property!” a voice boomed from the hallway.
The security camera captured the instant transition from arrogant entitlement to sheer, unadulterated panic on their faces.
My father straightened his jacket reflexively, while my mother accidentally knocked a porcelain tea cup off the side table, shattering it.
Chloe clutched the wooden box to her chest like a common thief caught in the act of shoplifting.
When the uniformed officers entered the living room, my father tried to use his commanding “businessman” voice to take control.
“Officers, there has clearly been a misunderstanding, as this is a private family matter regarding my daughter’s property,” he claimed.
“My daughter gave us explicit permission to enter and prepare the home for sale before she left for London,” he added with a straight face.
One of the officers stepped forward and pulled out a digital recorder, playing the audio file I had provided earlier that morning.
My mother’s voice filled the silent room: “We wait until she leaves, bring in the locksmith, and put the place up for sale for Chloe.”
The silence that followed the recording was heavy and suffocating, making the air in the apartment feel thick with tension.
Maya suddenly burst into tears and looked at the police officers with an expression of genuine shock and regret.
“I was told that Elara was moving and that we were only coming here to help Chloe move in for a few days,” she whispered.
My father turned a sickly shade of gray, and my mother began to stammer through a series of increasingly transparent lies.
Chloe started screaming at the top of her lungs, accusing me of being a manipulative person who always tried to make her look bad.
The officers ignored her outbursts and began methodically photographing the forced lock, the packed boxes, and the broken graduation frame.
The locksmith, who was visibly trembling, admitted to the officers that my father had guaranteed him that he was the rightful owner.
I did not go back to my apartment that night because the memories of their intrusion felt too fresh and painful to face.
I stayed in the hotel room and watched the empty, quiet living room on my monitor until the sun began to rise over the city.
I foolishly thought that the worst part of the betrayal was over, but I was wrong about how far they were willing to go.
The following afternoon, a courier arrived at my hotel to serve me with a formal lawsuit from my own parents.
They were officially contesting my grandfather’s will, claiming that I was not the rightful owner of the home.
Now, they were attempting to use the legal system to steal my house in front of a judge and the entire city.