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    Home » After My Dad’s Funeral, My Greedy Stepmother Gave Me 24 Hours to Leave My Childhood Home – What I Found Taped Beneath the Bathroom Sink Made Her Go Pale
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    After My Dad’s Funeral, My Greedy Stepmother Gave Me 24 Hours to Leave My Childhood Home – What I Found Taped Beneath the Bathroom Sink Made Her Go Pale

    Han ttBy Han tt14/03/20267 Mins Read
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    I’m 19 years old, and until last winter, I believed the hardest thing I had ever gone through was losing my mother when I was five.

    Then I lost my father too.

    His name was Eric.

    The day of his funeral felt unreal, like I was walking through fog. I remember standing beside the grave, staring at the wooden coffin while someone from church spoke softly in the background.

    All I could think about was that just three weeks earlier my dad had been alive, standing in our kitchen flipping pancakes like he always did.

    Then the heart attack happened.

    And suddenly, he was gone.

    After the burial, people slowly began leaving. My aunt hugged me tightly and whispered that I could call her anytime.

    Carla stood beside me the whole time, quiet.

    She was my stepmother. My dad had married her when I was fifteen.

    At first she had seemed pleasant enough, but something about her always felt… rehearsed, like she was playing a role.

    Still, my dad looked happy with her, and that mattered more to me than my doubts.

    When we returned home after the funeral, the house felt strangely empty.

    My dad had built that house himself when I was little. It took him almost two years to finish.

    I remember sitting on the floor with crayons while he installed cabinets and hammered boards into place.

    Every corner of that house held a piece of him.

    I assumed we would spend months grieving together.

    But I was wrong.

    Only a few days after the funeral, Carla changed completely. While everyone else was still mourning, she was already talking about selling the house.

    One morning she cornered me in the kitchen while I was pouring cereal.

    “Diana, you have twenty-four hours to pack your things,” she said casually. “A realtor is coming tomorrow to evaluate the house.”

    I blinked at her, convinced I had misunderstood.

    “I think you’re joking,” I said. “I live here.”

    She smiled slowly, the kind of smile that made my stomach twist.

    “You only lived here because your father allowed it,” she replied. “But legally, the house belongs to me now. Eric signed it over months ago.”

    My stomach dropped.

    “What do you mean?”

    “There was paperwork,” she said calmly. “Signed about five months ago.”

    My voice shook.

    “Dad would never do that without telling me.”

    Carla simply shrugged and bit into an apple.

    “You should start packing.”

    I spent the afternoon in my room putting my life into boxes.

    Every few minutes I stopped and just stared at the walls, trying to imagine leaving the only home I had ever known.

    I didn’t even know where I would go.

    My aunt lived in another state.

    That evening the house felt tense instead of quiet.

    Carla kept pacing from room to room, making phone calls.

    Later that night, when I walked into the hallway to get water, a memory suddenly came back to me.

    After my mom died, mornings were the hardest part of my day. I used to wake up crying.

    My dad tried to help in his own strange way.

    Every morning before work, he taped a tiny surprise under the bathroom sink.

    Sometimes it was candy. Sometimes coins or silly notes.

    He said it was our secret.

    He kept doing it even when I got older.

    But the morning he di:ed, I never checked.

    Before leaving the house forever, I suddenly wanted to look one last time.

    I knelt down, opened the cabinet, and turned on my phone flashlight.

    At first, I didn’t see anything.

    Then the light caught something hidden behind the pipes.

    It was taped to the back wall.

    I carefully pulled it free.

    It was a button… and a folded note.

    My name was written on it in my dad’s handwriting.

    My hands started shaking as I opened it.

    The note read:

    Find the jacket this button came from in my closet. Open the lining. My last gift to you. Carla will be shocked.

    My heart started pounding.

    Before I could think further, Carla’s voice came from the doorway.

    “What are you doing under there?”

    I jumped and quickly slipped the note and button into my pocket.

    “Cleaning,” I said. “There was a leak earlier.”

    She stared at me suspiciously for several seconds before sighing.

    “I’m going to visit a friend,” she said. “I’ll be back later. Make sure you’re packed when I return.”

    Then she left.

    The moment her car disappeared down the driveway, I rushed to my dad’s bedroom.

    Inside his closet were rows of shirts and jackets.

    “Okay, Dad,” I whispered. “Let’s see what you left me.”

    I searched until I found an old dark blue jacket he used to wear while building the house.

    The second button from the bottom was missing.

    The button from under the sink matched perfectly.

    I brought the jacket to my room, locked the door, and examined the lining.

    One seam had been stitched differently.

    Using scissors, I carefully cut it open.

    A thick envelope slid onto the bed.

    Inside was another note in my dad’s handwriting.

    Take this to Mr. Hargrove. Do not open it.

    Every part of me wanted to read it right then.

    But I trusted my dad.

    So I slipped the envelope into my backpack.

    Just then I heard Carla’s car pulling into the driveway.

    The next morning I left the house before sunrise.

    By 7:45 a.m. I was standing outside our local bank.

    When the doors opened, I asked to see the bank manager.

    “Mr. Hargrove.”

    The receptionist looked surprised but took the envelope back to him.

    Two minutes later, a gray-haired man came out.

    “Miss?”

    “My name is Diana,” I said quickly. “My dad was Eric.”

    His expression softened immediately.

    “I’m very sorry for your loss. Please come with me.”

    Inside his office I handed him the envelope.

    He read the letter, then quietly closed the door.

    “Your father came here three months ago,” he explained. “He opened a safe deposit box and instructed us to release it only to you if you brought this envelope.”

    He retrieved a small key.

    “Follow me.”

    In the safe-deposit room he opened a metal box and placed it on a table.

    “This belongs to you.”

    Then he left.

    Inside were three things:

    A stack of legal documents.
    Several photographs.
    And a letter addressed to me.

    My father’s handwriting filled the page.

    My dearest Diana,

    If you’re reading this, then things happened the way I feared. Carla pushed me to transfer the house to her. Something about it made me uneasy, so I spoke to a lawyer afterward.

    These new documents transfer the house to you instead. Because they were filed later, they override the previous transfer.

    Tears filled my eyes.

    The official deed was right there.

    The house was legally mine.

    He had protected me.

    When I returned home, Carla was outside with a realtor.

    She frowned when she saw me.

    “Why are you still here?”

    I walked up the driveway and handed the realtor a copy of the deed.

    Carla scoffed and produced her own papers.

    The realtor studied both sets carefully.

    Then he closed his folder.

    “I’m sorry,” he said. “But the most recent deed is legally binding. The property belongs to her.”

    Carla’s smile vanished.

    “I can’t list the house.”

    The realtor left.

    Carla turned red with anger.

    “You think this is over? I’ll take you to court!”

    “Go ahead,” I said.

    She stormed away.

    While she was gone, I called a locksmith and changed every lock in the house.

    When she returned and her key didn’t work, she began pounding on the door.

    “LET ME IN!”

    “Go away,” I said calmly.

    She called the police.

    When officers arrived, I handed them the deed.

    After reading it, one officer turned to her.

    “Ma’am, the property legally belongs to her. You’ll need to leave.”

    Carla grabbed her bags and drove away.

    That night, before going to bed, I went into the bathroom and opened the cabinet under the sink.

    I taped a small note there.

    Thanks for looking out for me, Dad.

    I didn’t know what the future would bring.

    But at least for now…

    I still had my home.

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