He Changed The Locks On My Lake House — He Didn’t Know The Deed Was Still In My Name-yumihong

The stamped paper was still warm from the copier when I slid it back into the blue folder.

The attorney’s assistant had used a silver clip instead of a black one, and for some reason that small detail stayed with me. The office smelled faintly of toner, lemon polish, and air-conditioning turned too cold for a Georgia summer. Somewhere behind the frosted glass wall, a printer hummed, stopped, then started again. I kept my palm flat over the folder for a second, feeling the raised edge of the clip through the cardstock, and listened to the fountain in the corner click water into itself.

“Would you like us to have the sheriff serve it before the holiday?” my attorney asked.

I looked up.

She was a woman named Marsha Bell, sixty if she was a day, with short blond hair and the kind of face that had delivered bad news and fixed it for other women for thirty years. She had been the one who handled Samuel’s estate after the funeral. She knew what the lake house was. She knew what it had cost me to finish it alone.

“Yes,” I said.

My voice came out steady enough to surprise me.

“Friday morning,” she said, making a note. “Before their guests settle in.”

I nodded once.

That was all.

When Samuel was alive, we were not flashy people. We were the kind who split desserts at chain restaurants and saved wrapping paper if it still looked decent. He wore the same watch for twenty years. I drove my cars until the steering wheel went smooth and the driver’s seat cracked at the seam. But he had always wanted water.

Not a yacht. Not luxury. Just a place where the day could open slow and end slower.

On Sunday afternoons, he used to spread paper napkins on the kitchen table and sketch rooms in blue ballpoint pen. A square for the kitchen. A long rectangle for the porch. Arrows for morning light and evening shade. He wanted a mudroom because grandkids never came in clean. He wanted deep steps down to the dock because his knees had started bothering him in his late fifties. He wanted one porch swing wide enough for two people who had already learned how to sit in silence together.

At the time, the plans felt like one of those lovely things married people promise each other when there’s still plenty of time.

Then came the diagnosis.

Fourteen months later, I was choosing an urn.

Grief changed shape depending on the hour. In the mornings it was his empty side of the bed, the sheet still tucked too neatly because nobody had kicked it loose. At the grocery store it was standing in front of the coffee aisle and realizing my hand still reached for the dark roast he liked best. At night it was the quiet after dishes, the house holding itself still around me, every lamp on because I could not bear the rooms dark all at once.

The lake house gave my hands somewhere to put all that grief.

I learned more about roof pitches, septic permits, marine-grade stain, and county inspections than any retired nurse had business learning. Every other weekend I drove from Atlanta to Lake Oconee with a legal pad on the passenger seat and Samuel’s folded napkin sketches tucked in the visor. Contractors learned quickly that I was polite but not vague. If I asked why the window trim looked uneven, I expected an answer. If I wrote a check, I wanted the work done exactly as billed.

The day the floors went in, I took my shoes off and walked across the pine in my socks. The boards were smooth and cool, and the whole empty house smelled like sawdust, paint, and lake air moving through unfinished screens. I stood in the middle of the kitchen and put both hands on the future island and said, out loud, “There you are.”

Nobody heard me.

The first time Lorraine saw the finished place, she cried.

My daughter had always been emotional in a sweet, loose way. She cried at dog movies, graduations, Christmas commercials, songs she hadn’t heard since high school. She hugged me on the porch and said, “Dad would have loved this,” with her mascara damp at the corners. Kevin followed behind her carrying a case of soda and two folding chairs, smiling that broad, easy smile of a man who had not yet decided anything belonged to him.

He was handsome in a polished, forgettable way. Tidy beard. Golf shirts. Boat shoes even when there was no boat. He sold commercial insurance and treated every conversation like it might turn into a pitch. But early on he hid it well. He grilled burgers, stacked deck chairs, called me “Miss Dorothy” just enough to sound respectful without quite sounding natural.

The first summer was easy enough to fool a woman into feeling safe.

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