
My father’s new wife, Alina, is younger than me. He’s 63, she’s 26, and I’m 32. I wish the age gap were the strangest part—but last month, Dad sat me down and casually announced he’d changed his entire will so that everything would go to her. The house, the savings, the retirement fund—every last thing he and my late mother built together.

When I confronted him, he waved his hand like I was overreacting.
“Your mother left you the heirlooms, and you have a decent job,” he said. “You’ll be fine. But Alina is young. She needs security. She needs to be taken care of.”
I felt heat rise to my face. I couldn’t even speak. And Alina—standing behind him in her designer loungewear—just flashed a smug, sideways smirk, like she’d already won.
But I wasn’t about to let that be the final word.
For days, a knot twisted in my stomach. Something felt off. So I dug through property records and old legal documents. That’s when I found it—the house Dad “promised” to Alina wasn’t even fully his to give. The deed was still in both his name and my mother’s. The transfer had never been completed after she passed.
Which meant half the house was legally mine.
When I confronted him with the paperwork, he went pale. Alina’s smirk vanished instantly.

Suddenly, Dad’s gentle indifference flipped into icy disappointment.
“I can’t believe you’d do this to us,” he said. “Alina needs stability. You’re being selfish.”
Selfish. For defending the last piece of my mother she left behind.
Alina avoided me completely after that. Dad and she whispered in corners, slammed doors, and had arguments that spilled through the walls whenever I stopped by. The tension between them became undeniable. He blamed me for “ruining the peace,” but I couldn’t understand how insisting on what was legally—and morally—mine was a crime.
I didn’t take the house from Alina.
I didn’t twist his arm or steal anything.
I simply refused to let my mother be erased.
Now Dad barely speaks to me unless it’s to guilt-trip or criticize. He says he no longer recognizes the daughter he raised. But maybe I no longer recognize the father who put a stranger’s comfort above his own child’s rights.
So here I am, wondering: Was I wrong for claiming what legally belonged to me… even if it meant shattering the illusion of his “happy” marriage?