โDonโt worry, Dad,โ I said, and I felt something settle inside of me, a quiet resolve snapping into place. โI wonโt cause any problems.โ
โGood,โ he sighed, relief already flooding his voice. โThatโs all Iโโ
โIโll handle this my way,โ I added.He didnโt know what that meant. Victoria didnโt either. But Mom would have.
After we hung up, I sat there for a long moment, the weight of the envelope solid in my lap, like a physical representation of something much bigger: trust, legacy, and the promise Iโd silently made at my motherโs funeral, standing barefoot in the sand outside the beach house with the ocean pounding its grief into the shore.
I opened my laptop, pulled up a flight booking page, and typed in my destination: coastal Massachusetts.
My fingers moved over the keys with surprising steadiness. Morning flight. One checked bag. Return flight left open-ended.
Confirm.
It was time to go home.
But first, there were calls to make.
An hour later, I sat at my kitchen table, a mug of lukewarm tea forgotten at my elbow, while I scribbled notes on a legal pad as I spoke with Margaret.โWe have everything we need,โ she said, her voice calm and crisp on the line. I could picture herโsteel-gray bob, wire-rim glasses, the kind of woman whose very presence made people sit up straighter. Sheโd been my momโs lawyer, but also her friend; I remembered her bringing fresh-baked banana bread to the hospital, slipping me twenty-dollar bills for snacks when she thought Mom wasnโt looking.
โThe trust was executed cleanly and with full capacity,โ she continued. โYour father knew exactly what he was signing at the time. The beach house has been separate from his other assets since your motherโs passing. It is not marital property. Legally, it belongs to you and only you.โ
โBut Victoria says he transferred it,โ I said, even though I knew the answer.
โLegally,โ Margaret repeated, โhe cannot transfer what he doesnโt own. Whatever paperwork he signed with her is invalid where the beach house is concerned. At best, sheโs confused. At worstโฆโ I could hear the faint clack of keyboard keys on her end. โAt worst, she deliberately misled him.โ
We walked through every stepโwho I should talk to, what to bring, what to say and, more importantly, what not to say. Sheโd already contacted the local authorities and sent them copies of the trust and deed.
โThe local police have been notified,โ Margaret said. โOfficer Martinez is expecting you. He has copies of the documents and understands that you are the legal owner. If thereโs any trouble, heโll assist.โ
I pictured Victoriaโs face when a uniformed officer calmly informed her sheโd banned the wrong person from the property. A tiny flare of satisfaction warmed my chest.
One more thing,โ Margaret added. โIโve documented all of Victoriaโs attempts to access the trust over the years. The judge will be very interested if this ever goes to court.โ
A memory surfaced: Victoria hovering near Momโs desk after the funeral, her fingers brushing the locked drawer with my motherโs files. Or the time sheโd asked an oddly casual question over dinner: โSo, Alexandra, what ever happened with that old beach property paperwork? Your mother always hated dealing with that stuff.โ Iโd shrugged and said something noncommittal, watching her eyes narrow thoughtfully.
It hadnโt been paranoia. Mom had seen it. Margaret had seen it. I just hadnโt wanted to see it as clearly.
We wrapped up the call, and I walked to my living room window. Outside, the sky had shifted from fiery orange to deep purple, city lights sparkling like a second constellation below. Somewhere out there, people were going about their lives, unaware that in one small apartment, a battle line had been quietly drawn over a house by the sea.
My phone buzzed again.
Victoria.
Iโm having your motherโs roses removed from the garden tomorrow, her text said. Time to let go of the past.
For a moment, I couldnโt breathe.
I could see the roses clearly: deep crimson, planted along the front path, dancing in the sea breeze. Mom had cared for those bushes like they were old friends. Sheโd talked to them while she pruned, humming under her breath, fingers stained green. Sheโd given cuttings to neighbors, saying, โSo a little piece of our home can bloom at yours.โ
Time to let go of the past.
I didnโt reply. There was nothing I could say that would matter to her. She wasnโt trying to inform me. She was trying to hurt me. To mark the house as hers by tearing out one of the last tangible pieces of Mom.
Instead, I set my phone aside and went to my bedroom.
I packed.
I packed jeans and sweaters and the old navy-blue hoodie Mom had once stolen from my closet, worn all weekend at the beach house, and then reluctantly returned after weโd argued playfully about โownership.โ I packed the manila envelope with the trust documents and the deed, tucking them carefully between two thick hardcover books. I slid a worn photo of Mom and me on the beachโme about seven years old, hair in tangled braids, her in a floppy hatโinto the inside pocket of my bag.
As I zipped the suitcase closed, Momโs voice popped into my mind again, from that last summer weโd spent together at the house.
โSometimes, sweetheart,โ sheโd said, as weโd sat on the porch watching the sun slip beneath the horizon, turning the water molten gold, โthe best revenge is simply standing your ground and letting others realize how badly theyโve underestimated you.โ
I hadnโt fully understood it then.
I did now.
Tomorrow, Victoria would learn exactly what that meant.
The early morning fog in coastal Massachusetts didnโt rollโit wrapped. It moved like something alive, winding around telephone poles and dunes, blurring streetlights into hesitant halos. As my Uber wound its way along the familiar coastal road, I pressed my forehead against the cool window and inhaled deeply, almost able to smell the ocean through the glass.
The landscape shifted from town to sea. One moment there were clapboard houses and weathered storefronts; the next, the horizon opened up, and there it was: a sheet of gray-green water, restless and infinite.
Then, through the thickening mist, I saw it.
The house.
My heart twisted.
From a distance, it looked both completely unchanged and deeply wrong at the same time. The wraparound porch was still there, hugging the front and side of the house like a protective arm. The weathered shingles, once a proud gray, looked freshly painted, losing some of their charm in the glossy uniformity. The white railing had been replaced with something sleeker, more modern, and utterly out of place.
The car pulled into the crushed-shell driveway that crunched under the tires.
And parked right smack where Momโs old garden shed used to beโwhere sheโd kept bags of soil, chipped terracotta pots, and a radio permanently tuned to classic rockโwas a bright red Mercedes.
Of course.
New security cameras peered from the corners of the house like watchful, judging eyes. A large NO TRESPASSING sign was hammered into the ground not far from the driveway entrance. It was glossy and new, with bold red letters that clashed horribly with the soft, muted tones of sand and sea grass surrounding it.
Perfect, I thought.
Before I could even open the car door, the front door flew open and Victoria stormed out, the fog swirling dramatically around her as if even nature had been enlisted in her theatrics.
She was wearing designer workout gear, all sleek black and neon accents, her blond hair pulled back into a tight ponytail that didnโt dare move in the breeze. The outfit looked like it belonged in some elite city gym, not on the front steps of a weather-beaten beach house that had seen more fishing nets and sandy feet than yoga mats.
Behind her, Lily emerged, phone in hand, camera aimed straight at me.
Of course she was filming.
โI told you youโre not welcome here!โ Victoria shrieked as she marched down the shell-lined path toward the car, her sneakers crunching dramatically. โGet back in that car and leave, Alexandra. Right now. Iโm calling the police.โ
โPlease do,โ I replied, opening my door calmly.
The ocean air hit me like a drugโsalt and damp and the faint smell of seaweed. My lungs expanded like they hadnโt in months. I stepped out, the shells grinding beneath my boots, and pulled my suitcase from the trunk.
โIn fact,โ I added, straightening and meeting her furious gaze coolly, โI already called them myself. They should be here any minute.โ
For a second, she faltered. It was quickโjust a hitch in her step, a flicker in her eyesโbut I saw it. Then her face tightened, her lips pressing into a razor-thin line.
โYou entitled littleโโ
The distant wail of sirens cut her off.
We all turned as two patrol cars emerged through the fog, lights quietly spinning. They pulled into the driveway, careful not to block anyone in, and parked.
Lily zoomed in with her phone, no doubt already thinking of captions.
One of the officers stepped out. I recognized him from the brief conversation weโd had the night before.
โMrs. Harrison,โ Officer Martinez said, addressing Victoria as he approached. His dark hair was tucked neatly beneath his cap, his posture professional but not unfriendly. โWe received your complaint about a trespasser.โ
Victoria thrust a hand toward me like she was presenting evidence in court. โYes! Thatโs her. She doesnโt live here. She has no rightโโ
He didnโt look where she was pointing. Instead, he reached into his jacket and pulled out a folder. โThere seems to be a misunderstanding.โ
โThereโs no misunderstanding,โ she snapped, her cheeks flushing. โThis is my house. My husband signed it over to me. I told you that on the phone.โ
Officer Martinez opened the folder, glanced at the top document, and then looked at me. โMiss Alexandra Parker?โ he asked.
โThatโs me,โ I said.
He nodded. โWe reviewed the documents your lawyer sent last night. According to these,โ he tapped the folder lightly, โMiss Parker is the legal owner of this property.โ
Silence dropped like a stone.
Lilyโs phone dipped lower. Victoria blinked once, twice, as if the words had been spoken in another language.
โThatโs impossible,โ she finally sputtered. โMy husband signed the deed over to me last month. We had it notarized. Iโve already started paperwork toโโ
I reached into my bag and pulled out the manila envelope, the trust pages already familiar under my fingers. โDad couldnโt sign over what wasnโt his to give,โ I said, keeping my tone level. โMom put this house in a trust before she died. Iโm the sole beneficiary. The beach house has been owned by the trust this entire time.โ
โLiar,โ Lily muttered, but there was a tremor in it.
Officer Martinez turned the folder slightly, so Victoria could see the top page. โThese documents are clear, Mrs. Harrison. This property was placed in an irrevocable trust by the late Mrs. Parker. Her daughter is the beneficiary and legal owner. Your husbandโs signature on any later deed regarding this property has no legal effect.โ
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