My sister moved into a $912,000 lake house using my name, my credit, and my forged signature — but when my mother said, “You weren’t using your credit anyway,”-criss - US Social News

My sister moved into a $912,000 lake house using my name, my credit, and my forged signature — but when my mother said, “You weren’t using your credit anyway,”-criss

My sister moved into a $912,000 lake house using my name, my credit, and my forged signature — but when my mother said, “You weren’t using your credit anyway,” she didn’t know my lawyer had told me to record every word.

“Your $912,000 mortgage is ninety days overdue,” the bank officer said.

I stood barefoot in my kitchen at 7:12 a.m., holding a spoon over coffee I hadn’t tasted yet.

The refrigerator hummed behind me. The tile was cold under my feet. Burnt toast sat in the trash. My basil plant drooped by the window. The coffee smelled sharp, bitter, untouched.

“My what?” I asked.

“Your mortgage, Ms. Adrianne Rivers. Lake Haven property. Opened three years ago.”

I did not own a lake house.

I rented a one-bedroom apartment in Queens with secondhand furniture, a cracked desk chair, and a credit score I protected like a child.

Then the officer said the address.

Lake Haven, New York.

My sister’s dream town.

Three years earlier, Marina had cried at my parents’ dining table because she “needed fresh air” and “a house where her children could heal.” My mother had rubbed her back while staring at me.

“Family helps family,” she said.

But in my family, that meant one thing.

I paid.

At 8:03 a.m., I pulled my credit report.

There it was.

Mortgage loan. Residential property. Past due. Legal collection pending.

My hands went numb.

By noon, I had torn through old folders until my living room looked searched by police. Tax forms. ID copies. Bank statements. Insurance files.

Then I found a sticky note in my mother’s handwriting.

Adrianne backup info.

Backup.

Not daughter.

Backup.

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