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At my father’s funeral, my brother stood up and announced, “We’re selling the house right away to cover my $340,000 gambling debt.” Then my mother turned to me and calmly added, “You’ll need to find somewhere else to live.” – Reading Times

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I didn’t know that would be the last time I would ever hear his voice. I spent the next several days wishing I had asked him why he had stayed quiet for so many years while I was being pushed aside.

The morning after his death, I went to the house on Brookside Lane expecting to find grief and memories. What I found instead was a house being treated like a warehouse full of inventory.

Wesley met me at the front door and gave me the kind of awkward, one-armed hug people offer when they feel a sense of obligation. “Long time no see, sis,” he said, looking me up and down. “You look pretty tired.”

I barely heard his comment because I was too busy staring at the hallway which was cluttered with designer luggage and brand-new sets of golf clubs. My brother had been unemployed for almost a year, yet the house looked like a showroom for a man with an unlimited bank account.

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