“My mother took it,” she said softly. “She said calls would distract you… and that money was tight.”

Money.

Tight.

I had been sending thousands every month.

“How long were you living out there?”

“…almost four years.”

No one breathed.

I turned to my mother.

She stood there in pearls.

Perfect.

While my son starved.

“You have one hour to pack,” I said.

She laughed. “You’d throw your own mother out?”

“You threw my family out four years ago,” I said. “I’m just correcting it.”

Then I pulled out my phone.

Six seconds later—both her and Claire’s cards were frozen.

Their faces changed instantly.

I called the bank. Reported everything.

Then I opened the safe.

The documents proved it all.

The house wasn’t theirs.

It was mine.

And legally—

Maya’s.

I watched the truth destroy them piece by piece.

Claire’s fiancé took off his ring.

Guests started leaving.

My mother tried to argue.

I didn’t listen.

Security came.

Forty-two minutes later—

They were gone.

Just like that.

The house fell silent.

For the first time in five years—

It felt like mine again.

I turned to Maya.

“We don’t have to stay here tonight,” I said.

She looked around slowly.

“Can we… stay?” she whispered.

“Anywhere you want,” I said.