She Paid for the Visit, Then Found Her Name on the Beach House Form-olive

Camille had learned to recognize damage before other people admitted it existed.

That was part of her job.

She restored historic hotels for a living, and every project began the same way: owners praised the chandeliers, tourists photographed the staircases, and Camille found the swelling under the wallpaper.

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Rot did not always announce itself.

Sometimes it hid under polish.

Sometimes it waited behind beautiful trim.

That was why she should have recognized what her family had become sooner.

For four years, her parents had not visited her.

They called, usually when something was wrong, and they always began with small talk that lasted just long enough to make the request sound accidental.

Dad had lost his job, then found a smaller one, then needed a little help until things evened out.

Mom’s prescriptions went up.

Heidi had childcare trouble, then car trouble, then an emergency bill, then another emergency bill dressed in a different outfit.

Camille helped because she could.

She was single, employed, careful with money, and the kind of daughter who believed competence came with responsibility.

Her parents never said it that plainly.

They did not have to.

They had raised her to understand that love meant anticipating need before anyone had to ask.

When Mom called in early spring and said, “We miss you, Camille. We really do,” Camille let herself believe the sentence.

She booked the flights that night.

Round trip.

Two seats.

She added checked bags because Mom always overpacked, and she rented a car because Heidi’s house was half an hour away and she did not want distance to become the excuse.

The total made her wince, but she told herself it was worth it.

Four years was a long time.

A daughter could forgive a lot for four years.

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