She Refused Her Family’s Beach House Takeover. Then Friday Came-olive

My name is Natalie Price, and for most of my life, I was the daughter who made things easy.

That was not a compliment in the Price family.

It was a job description.

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My father, Leonard Price, believed a family worked best when everyone understood his comfort came first.

My mother, Sharon Price, believed conflict was not created by the person crossing the line, but by the person finally pointing at it.

My brother Brent learned both lessons early and polished them into a personality.

If Leonard wanted the best chair, he got it.

If Sharon wanted a holiday moved, it moved.

If Brent needed help, the entire room turned toward me before he even finished the sentence.

I was the responsible one.

That meant I had the calendar, the credit card, the spare patience, and the smile that said none of this costs me anything.

It cost me plenty.

By the time I married Noah, I had become very good at making myself convenient.

Noah noticed before I had language for it.

The first Thanksgiving he spent with my parents, he watched my father hand me his empty plate without looking away from the football game.

Noah took the plate out of my hands and carried it to the kitchen himself.

My father laughed like it was charming.

My mother said, “Natalie likes helping.”

Noah did not argue.

He just looked at me, and for the first time I wondered whether liking something and being trained to do it were the same thing.

They were not.

The beach house came years later, after a stretch of work so punishing I barely remember whole months of my life.

I work in cybersecurity, which sounds sleek when people say it at dinner and feels much less sleek at 2:17 a.m. when a client’s system is bleeding data and your phone will not stop ringing.

There were nights I slept with my laptop open beside me.

There were vacations Noah and I canceled from hotel lobbies.

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