She Let Her Stepmother Take Her Beach House, Then Took the Stage-eirian

My stepmother called me at 11:47 p.m. on my very first night in the beach house I had paid for entirely on my own.

I remember the time because I had just looked at the oven clock and thought I should go to bed before the ocean made me too sentimental.

The house was quiet in that strange way new houses are quiet before your life has fully moved into them.

Image

There were boxes stacked along the hallway, a folded blanket on the sofa, and a half-empty paper cup of coffee on the kitchen island from the drive down.

Outside, the Pacific kept hitting the rocks in a slow, heavy rhythm.

The glass doors were cracked open, and the night air smelled like salt, cold stone, and the faint citrus cleaner I had used on the counters even though the cleaners had already been there that morning.

For one hour, I felt free.

Then Gillian called.

She was my stepmother, though she had always treated that word like it gave her authority without responsibility.

She did not say hello in the usual way.

She did not ask whether I had arrived safely.

She did not congratulate me for buying the house.

She simply said, “Your father and I will be there tomorrow afternoon. We’ll need the master bedroom, obviously. Paige should take the ocean-view suite. She’s had a stressful year.”

I thought I had misheard her.

I sat on the edge of my own sofa, one foot tucked beneath me, staring at the dark reflection of myself in the sliding glass door.

“What do you mean, need the master bedroom?” I asked.

Gillian gave a small, patient sigh, the kind she used when she wanted a room to think I was being difficult.

“Kaitlyn, don’t start. It’s a six-bedroom house. You don’t need all that space. Your father and I are moving in, and Paige deserves the best view. If that makes you uncomfortable, you can always stay somewhere else until you adjust.”

There are moments when anger comes hot.

This did not.

This came cold.

My bare feet were on hardwood I had paid for.

My name was on every closing document.

My money had made the wire transfer.

And this woman was calmly arranging my house like a seating chart at one of her charity luncheons.

I said, “I’ll call you tomorrow.”

Then I hung up.

For several seconds, I just listened to the ocean.

Then I called my father.

He answered groggy, the television murmuring behind him.

“Dad,” I said, “are you and Gillian moving into my house tomorrow?”

There was a pause.

A real pause.

Not a guilty pause.

A confused one.

Read More