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Sister Posted My 'Defaulted' Beach House — Then The HOA President Found My Platinum Membership @RevengeNexus-j1e The open house started at 11 AM on a Saturday in late August. I knew the exact time because my sister Ashley had posted it on every real estate platform she could find: Zillow, Realtor.com, Facebook Marketplace, even Craigslist. "URGENT SALE - Oceanfront Property - Owner Must Liquidate - $750K Cash Only - Today Only." I was watching from my car, parked three blocks down Ocean Vista Drive in Malibu, California. The house—my house—sat at the end of a private cul-de-sac with direct beach access, floor-to-ceiling windows facing the Pacific, and a market value around $3.2 million. Ashley had priced it at less than a quarter of its worth, and the desperation in her listing had attracted exactly the kind of buyers she wanted: cash investors looking for distressed properties. Fifteen cars were parked along the street by 11:15 AM. I recognized one of them—my mother's white Lexus. Another belonged to my cousin Derek. Ashley had made this a family event. I sat in my Honda Civic, laptop open on the passenger seat, watching security camera feeds from inside the house. I'd installed the system myself two years ago, linked to my phone and computer. Ashley didn't know they existed because Ashley had never actually been inside this house before today. The cameras showed her giving a tour to a middle-aged couple in business casual. "The owner—my sister Sarah—got in over her head," Ashley was saying, her voice picked up clearly by the microphone in the living room. "She bought this place at the peak of the market, couldn't keep up with payments, and the bank is about to foreclose. She's desperate to avoid the credit hit, so she's accepting the first cash offer today." None of that was true. I'd bought the house eighteen months ago, paid in full, no mortgage. But Ashley had discovered the property tax records—public information in California—and apparently decided that owning a $3.2 million beach house meant I was either in financial trouble or stupid enough to let her handle my "crisis." Mom appeared on camera, walking through with a notebook and measuring tape. She was cataloging furniture. "The couch needs to go," she said to someone off-screen. "But the dining table is good quality. We can move it to my place." Derek was in the kitchen, opening cabinets. "Does the dishwasher come with the house? What about the wine fridge?" Ashley addressed the growing crowd in the living room—maybe twenty people now, some taking photos, others examining crown molding and testing light switches. "I'm accepting offers until 1 PM today. All cash, as-is, close in thirty days. My sister signed power of attorney last month when she realized she couldn't handle this anymore." She held up a document. From three blocks away, even zooming in on my laptop, I couldn't see details. But I knew it was fake. I'd never signed power of attorney to anyone, let alone to Ashley, who I'd spoken to maybe twice in the past five years. #aita #reddit #redditstories #redditstory #revengestory #revenge