When my dad told us to pack and leave, I thought he was bluffing. He wasn’t. But just when it felt like we’d lost everything, life turned around in the most unexpected way.
My dad was the loudest in public, but cold and cruel at home. My mom and I tiptoed around his moods, until one day, he decided we no longer belonged.
I was 15 when things collapsed. He’d come home late, drunk, reeking of perfume that wasn’t Mom’s. I overheard him once, joking on the phone: “I still keep her around — someone’s gotta do laundry.”
Mom tried confronting him. He mocked her, saying she was too weak to survive without him. That night, I finally spoke up: “You don’t deserve her — or me.” After that, we were ghosts under one roof.
Then one night at dinner, he said it coldly: “You’ve got a month. Get out. This is my house.”
Technically, he was right. It belonged to my grandfather, who was sick and dying. But the only one who cared for him was Mom. Not Dad — not once.
Three weeks later, Grandpa passed. At the reading of the will, Dad was smug — until the lawyer said the house had been left to me.
“To me?” I whispered.
The lawyer nodded: “Your grandfather said you have more decency at 15 than your father at 40.”
Dad exploded, but it was all legal. The house was mine.
That night, Mom filed for divorce. We sat at the kitchen table, finally unafraid. When she clicked “submit,” we both exhaled. Then we laughed — really laughed — for the first time in years.
A week later, Dad still hadn’t left. So we gave him 24 hours. He raged, but we stood our ground. He slammed the door on his way out — suitcase in hand, pride in pieces.
That was eight years ago.
Now, the house is ours. Mom smiles again. I’m in college, and Grandpa’s old room is my study. We planted roses outside — her favorite.
And every time I walk through that door, I thank Grandpa. He didn’t just leave us a house. He gave us freedom.