I went to my beach house expecting a quiet vacation, but instead I found the kitchen torn apart and the master bedroom under renovation. My son looked at me like nothing was wrong and said, “I’m remodeling so my wife and her parents can move in.”
That’s when I opened my property file and called my lawyer.
By the next morning, they were the ones knocking on my door at 6 a.m.
When I pulled up to the house that Friday afternoon, Kloe was already outside on the deck, directing a group of workers like she owned the place.
She didn’t greet me.
She didn’t even look at me when I stopped the car.
She simply lifted her hand and pointed toward the kitchen, shouting instructions about tiles needing to arrive before Monday.
A cold feeling settled over me, and it had nothing to do with the ocean breeze.
I stepped out of the car slowly, taking everything in.
The front door was wide open.
Bags of cement were stacked beside my flower pots—the geraniums I had planted myself five years ago.
From inside, the sharp, relentless sound of a drill echoed through the house.
My house.
The house I bought after forty years of working double shifts as a nurse at General Hospital.
The house I paid for with my own sweat after my husband passed away, leaving me with nothing but debts and broken promises.