She Bought Her Dream Beach House, Then Her Stepmother Claimed It-galacy

I bought the beach house with money nobody in my family knew I had saved.

That was the first mistake, according to Brenda.

Not saving it.

Image

Keeping it from her.

The house was small by beachfront standards, but to me it felt impossible every time I looked at it.

White siding.

Blue doors.

Patterned tile that stayed cool under bare feet.

A terrace facing water so bright in the afternoon that it almost hurt to look at.

I had spent fifteen years building the life that led to that front door.

Fifteen years of Boston winters, rented apartments, thrift-store furniture, leftovers in glass containers, cheap flights not taken, weddings I skipped because I could not justify the hotel, and bonuses moved quietly into a savings account nobody in my family knew existed.

On the morning of closing, my hand did not shake.

The settlement officer slid the final page toward me, and I signed my name in blue ink.

Madelyn Fletcher.

My name.

My loan.

My house.

For a few hours, that was all it was.

Joy.

The kind of private joy that makes you walk from room to room touching doorframes like the house might disappear if you stop proving it is real.

The place smelled like lemon cleaner and warm tile.

Salt air moved through the open windows.

A small American flag fluttered on the porch railing because the previous owners had left it there, and I had not had the heart to take it down.

I stood in the empty living room, holding the keys, and let myself believe I had finally reached a life nobody could rearrange.

Then Brenda called.

“We’ll get there before noon tomorrow,” she said. “I already told the movers to unload our things first. If that bothers you, Madelyn, then you can sleep in the maid’s room.”

She said it like she was discussing towel colors.

I stared at the water through the open windows.

“My rooms?” I asked.

“Don’t be dramatic,” Brenda said. “Your father agrees. Hailey needs the room with the terrace because she works from home. We’ll take the master bedroom. You’re alone. You don’t need that much space.”

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *