My brother secretly sold my $6.3M farmhouse for just $3M and spent it all on his girlfriend’s business, but when I rushed home and saw what he had done, I couldn’t stop laughing…

My brother secretly sold my $6.3M farmhouse for only $3M and poured every cent into his girlfriend’s business, but when I rushed back home and saw what he had done, I couldn’t stop laughing…

My brother called while I was standing in the airport security line and told me he had sold my farmhouse.

Not asked.

Not warned.

Sold.

“I got three million for it,” Brandon said, like he expected me to congratulate him. “Honestly, you should thank me. That old place was just sitting there.”

My suitcase was already moving down the conveyor belt. My passport was in my hand. I was supposed to be boarding a flight to Zurich for the first vacation I had taken in four years.

Instead, I stepped out of line.

“You sold my farmhouse?” I asked.

He laughed. “Don’t sound so dramatic. You live in the city. You barely use it.”

The farmhouse was worth $6.3 million.

It stood on eighty acres of restored apple orchards, wildflower fields, and lakefront land my grandmother had left to me before she died. I had rebuilt it beam by beam after a fire nearly destroyed the east wing. I paid the taxes. I hired the caretakers. I turned the old barn into a retreat space for foster kids aging out of the system.

Brandon called it “my country hobby.”

I called it the only place that had ever felt like home.

“Where is the money?” I asked.

Silence.

Then he said, “I spent it.”

My chest turned cold.

“On what?”

“My girlfriend’s business. She needed it more than you.”

For three seconds, the airport noise disappeared.

Then he added, “Don’t be selfish, Clara. You have other properties.”

I canceled my flight before he even finished.

By noon, I was behind the wheel of a rental car, driving six hours home while calling my attorney, my property manager, and the county recorder’s office. Brandon kept sending texts.

Don’t make this ugly.

It’s already done.

Family should support family.

By the time I reached the farmhouse gates, my rage had burned into something quieter.

Sharper.

Then I saw the “Sold” sign tilted beside the driveway.

Next to it stood Brandon, his girlfriend Tessa, and a man in a cheap navy suit holding a folder. Tessa wore sunglasses and smiled as if she had already picked out the curtains.

Brandon opened his arms. “See? No disaster. The buyer’s happy. Tessa’s business is saved. Everyone wins.”

I looked at the man in the suit.

Then at the farmhouse.

Then at the locked gate.

And I started laughing.

I could not stop myself.

Brandon’s smile slipped. “What’s funny?”

I wiped my eyes.

“What’s funny,” I said, “is that you sold a farmhouse you don’t own to a buyer who doesn’t exist, using a deed that became invalid six months ago.”

Tessa lowered her sunglasses.

The man in the suit forgot how to breathe.

And Brandon finally looked afraid.

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