My Stepmother Claimed My Beach House Before Dad’s Secret Came Out-habe

Brenda called the evening I finally unpacked the last box in my new beachfront house.

The windows were open, the Gulf air was rolling through the living room, and the fresh lemon-cleaner smell was still sharp on the tile.

I remember the exact weight of the keys in my hand because, for one peaceful minute, they felt like proof that all those years had finally added up to something.

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Then my phone rang.

“We’ll be there before noon tomorrow,” Brenda said, like she was confirming a pickup order. “I already told the movers to unload our things first.”

I looked at the blank wall where I planned to hang my mother’s framed watercolor of the ocean.

“What movers?” I asked.

Brenda sighed, the way she always did when she wanted me to feel childish before I even finished a sentence.

“Don’t start, Madelyn. Hailey needs the room with the terrace because she works from home, and your father and I will take the primary bedroom.”

I stood very still.

Outside, a gull screamed over the terrace, and the curtains snapped once in the salt breeze.

“My primary bedroom?” I said.

“If that bothers you, sleep in the maid’s room,” Brenda replied.

There was no maid’s room.

There was a small storage room near the laundry closet with a window barely big enough to let in light, and Brenda had not even seen it yet.

She had simply decided that if there was a lesser place in my house, it belonged to me.

“Brenda,” I said, keeping my voice as flat as I could, “this is my house.”

“Your father agrees,” she said.

That was how she always ended arguments.

Not with facts.

With him.

“You’re by yourself,” she went on. “You don’t need all that space. Families help each other.”

Then she hung up before I could say anything else.

For a long time, I stood in my own living room with the phone still against my ear and the sun making bright water patterns across the ceiling.

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