Six months earlier, I had transferred the farmhouse and all eighty acres into a conservation trust. The property could no longer be sold without my signature and the approval of three trustees. The deed Brandon used had been replaced and officially recorded with the county. The man in the cheap navy suit wasn’t a real buyer at all—he was a private lender who had handed over three million dollars based on forged documents and Brandon’s lies.
The color drained from Brandon’s face. Tessa’s business had already spent nearly all of the money on a flashy office, expensive equipment, and a marketing campaign. She kept insisting it was all a misunderstanding until my attorney’s car pulled into the driveway. He stepped out holding copies of the new deed and calmly informed everyone that the sale was invalid and that multiple crimes had likely been committed.
The lender looked at Brandon as if he had never seen him before. “You told me you owned this place,” he said quietly. Brandon tried to blame Tessa. Tessa blamed Brandon. Within an hour, sheriff’s deputies arrived and began taking statements. As the sun set over the orchards, I stood by the gate and watched the two of them realize that every dollar they had spent belonged to someone else.
A year later, the farmhouse was still mine. The retreat for foster kids had expanded, and the old barn was full of laughter again. Brandon eventually called from a court-ordered financial counseling program and apologized for the first time in his life. I accepted the apology but not the excuses.
As for me, I finally took that trip to Zurich. Before boarding the plane, I looked at a photo of the farmhouse on my phone and smiled. My brother thought he had sold my home and changed my future. Instead, he only proved something my grandmother used to say: greed makes people forget to check who actually owns the land beneath their feet