My family cut me off because I chose to spend $800 on a house instead of funding my sister’s “healing retreat.”
My mother looked at me with contempt and said, “Have fun living like trash.”
So I did.
And now they’re back—demanding something from me.
It started at 11:43 p.m.
A violent pounding shook my front door hard enough to send dust drifting from the warped ceiling. I froze in the middle of the living room, phone in one hand, flashlight in the other, staring at the lock like it might break at any second.
“Open the door, Leah!” my mother screamed from outside. “You think you can take from this family and hide in this dump?”
Something slammed into the siding.
Then my sister Rachel’s voice followed, sharp and frantic. “She’s in there. I saw her car.”
I stepped back, my heart racing.
The house had cost me just eight hundred dollars—paid in cash at a county tax auction. It stood just outside Millfield, Ohio. The place was barely holding together when I bought it. Cracked windows, stained floors, a roof that groaned with every gust of wind.
My family had laughed when I chose it instead of paying for Rachel’s trip to Sedona.
I still remember my mother standing in her spotless kitchen, arms crossed, her voice dripping with disdain.
“Have fun living like trash.”
So I did.
I cleaned mold from the walls, patched leaks, slept on an air mattress, and stayed away from them.
For three months, there was silence.
No calls. No messages. Nothing.
Then tonight, they showed up.
My phone buzzed suddenly—an unknown number.
DO NOT OPEN THE FLOOR IN THE KITCHEN. THEY KNOW.
Another crash slammed into the front door.
The frame cracked.
Rachel shouted from outside, “She found it before we did—I know she did!”
Found what?
I didn’t stop to think. I ran toward the kitchen, my flashlight beam shaking across the peeling linoleum.
At that exact moment, the porch light burst through the broken front window—
and one of the floorboards near the sink suddenly lifted upward with a sharp, violent crack.