I Lost Everything—Until Karma Pulled Up in a Limo
When my parents died suddenly, I was nineteen and alone in a house that still smelled like my mother’s baking. Grief came in fragments—police lights, a will reading, and my Aunt Dina in a red dress smiling through crocodile tears. Minutes later the lawyer announced that my childhood home now belonged to her. I could barely breathe as she ordered me to pack my bags and be gone within twenty-four hours.
The next morning I stood on the porch with two suitcases and my mother’s dying peace lily, watching Dina sip mimosas on the couch that used to be ours. That’s when a black limousine pulled up and a man in a gray suit stepped out—my long-lost Uncle Mike. He’d seen Dina’s gloating post online and started digging. Within minutes two police cars joined him, and Mike handed over a folder thick with evidence: forged signatures, fake lawyer, bank records—the works. Dina’s smirk vanished as the officers clicked the cuffs.
Three months later, a judge confirmed what we already knew: the will was fake, the house was mine, and Dina’s new address was a one-bedroom over a vape shop. The day I moved back in, sunlight poured through the kitchen windows as if my parents were welcoming me home.
Now the peace lily thrives in the window, the oven smells like cinnamon again, and every time I see a gray suit or hear the purr of a limousine, I remember—karma may run late, but when it finally arrives, it dresses sharp and doesn’t miss.