My Stepmother Changed the Beach House Locks. The Trust Proved Everything-eirian

Just as the day was ending, my stepmother called, her tone filled with quiet triumph—I could practically see the smug smile on her face. She informed me that I was no longer allowed anywhere near the family beach house because she had already changed every lock.

The last light over Boston had turned the windows of my apartment into black mirrors.

I could see myself in the glass with my phone pressed to one ear, my shoulders too high, my mouth set in the expression I had learned to wear around Diana Crawford.

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Calm, because anything else fed her.

Behind me, my laptop sat open on the kitchen table, an unfinished email waiting under the pale glow of the screen.

The kettle on the stove had clicked off ten minutes earlier, but I had forgotten to pour the water.

Diana did not sound angry when she called.

That was the first thing I noticed.

She sounded satisfied.

“You are permanently banned from the beach house,” she said, each word clean and careful. “I changed the locks this afternoon. If you step on that property, I’ll have you removed. Don’t test me.”

There are voices people use when they are protecting something.

There are voices people use when they are stealing something and want applause for the courage of it.

Diana’s voice was the second kind.

I looked at my own reflection and kept my hand still against the window frame.

“You mean the house my mother left?” I asked.

Diana laughed.

It was a small laugh, polished and sharp, the kind she used at restaurants when she wanted a server to understand that a complaint was coming.

“I mean this family’s house,” she said. “After what you did at Madeline’s graduation party, you don’t deserve to be there.”

The accusation was so ridiculous that for a second my body almost chose laughter over anger.

“The party I wasn’t even invited to?”

She made a sound of disgust.

“Stop playing the victim, Rebecca. Everyone knows you’ve always been jealous of Madeline.”

Everyone.

That word had carried Diana through years of small cruelties.

Everyone thought I was difficult.

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