I Woke Up to a Realtor Showing My House to Buyers

I jolted awake to strange voices in my living room. A man was describing the “charming original hardwood floors” while footsteps echoed through my childhood home. That’s when I realized someone was selling my house while I was still sleeping in it.

Have you ever had that moment when you realize the person you trusted most might be the one who betrayed you? Let me tell you how I learned that lesson the hard way.

Dad always said family was everything.

“Blood is thicker than water, Amelia,” he’d remind me while flipping pancakes on Sunday mornings. “When everything else falls apart, your sister will still be there.”

I believed him. Why wouldn’t I? For twenty-three years, he’d never steered me wrong.

When Dad passed away six weeks ago, it felt like someone had ripped out my heart and replaced it with concrete. Heavy. Cold. Unmovable. The funeral passed in a blur of black clothes and casseroles. People kept saying things like “he’s in a better place” and “time heals all wounds.”

Empty words that bounced off my grief like raindrops on an umbrella.

Alicia, my older sister, handled most of the arrangements. At thirty-five, she’d always been the responsible one, the organized one. While I fell apart, she stepped up.

She called funeral homes, contacted Dad’s friends, and even cleaned out his medicine cabinet when I couldn’t bear to do it myself.

“You’re so strong,” I told her after the service.

She squeezed my hand. “One of us has to be.”

I’d been living with Dad since graduating from college last year. It was supposed to be temporary, but then he got sick, and leaving became unthinkable.

Now, the house felt both empty and suffocating at the same time.

It wasn’t anything special from the outside. Just a modest three-bedroom ranch with faded blue siding and a slightly crooked mailbox. But inside those walls were fingerprint smudges from childhood art projects, height marks penciled on the kitchen doorframe, and the lingering scent of Dad’s aftershave that I couldn’t bring myself to air out.

Dad left the house to both of us. The lawyer told us Dad had left equal shares for both of us, and I wasn’t surprised. Dad was always fair that way.

What did surprise me was Alicia’s visit three days after the funeral. She showed up with lunch and a stack of papers.

“I’ve been thinking,” she said, spreading documents across the kitchen table. “It might be easier if you sign your half of the house over to me.”

“What?” I looked up from my barely-touched sandwich.

“Just for simplicity’s sake,” she explained, sliding a pen toward me. “When we eventually sell, we’ll split everything fifty-fifty, I promise. But this way, we avoid complications with banks and paperwork. You know how these things can drag on.”I didn’t know, actually. I’d never owned property before. Never lost a parent before. Never had to navigate any of this adult terrain that seemed to require a map I hadn’t been given.

“But why not keep it as is?” I asked.

Alicia sighed, that familiar big-sister sigh that always made me feel like I was missing something obvious.

“Because I’m married, Amelia. Rick and I have better credit, we understand the market, and frankly, we have the time to deal with this properly.” She reached across the table and squeezed my hand. “You’re grieving. You shouldn’t have to worry about property taxes and maintenance costs right now.”

It made sense when she put it that way. Dad would want things to be simple. He’d want us to work together, not get tangled in red tape and legal complications.

So, I signed the papers.

“You can stay as long as you need,” Alicia assured me. “Nothing’s going to change right away.”

I believed her. After all, she was my sister.

The following weeks were a blur of trying to establish a new normal. I went back to my marketing job at the local credit union and learned to cook for one.

While at home, I tried my best to avoid Dad’s things like his recliner that was still indented with the shape of him.

Some days were better than others. I’d go hours, sometimes even a full day, without that crushing weight of loss.

Just when I thought I might be finding my footing again, everything changed. And I mean everything.

It all began on a Saturday morning.

I’d been working overtime all week and had planned to sleep in, maybe catch up on some reading later. My bedroom door was closed, and my phone was on silent.

The voices woke me first. They were unfamiliar and too loud for 9:30 a.m.

“The kitchen was renovated five years ago,” a man’s voice announced. “All stainless steel appliances, granite countertops.”

For a few seconds, I thought I was dreaming. Then came the sound of cabinet doors opening and closing.

My heart leapt into my throat. Someone was in the house.

I slid out of bed, grateful I’d worn pajama pants and a t-shirt to sleep. Creeping to my bedroom door, I opened it just a crack and peered out.

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