Kneeling by the file cabinet, I pulled open the bottom drawer.
There it was—a worn manila envelope, edges softened with time, sealed with tape my mother had pressed down herself. My chest tightened as I lifted it.
On the front, in her neat handwriting:
ALEXANDRA – BEACH HOUSE – IMPORTANT
The word “IMPORTANT” was underlined three times.
I opened it carefully. The scent of old paper rose up as I pulled out the documents—her trust, created just months before she died. Behind it, the deed.
She had known.
I could see it clearly now—sitting beside her hospital bed years ago, her voice weak but determined as she held my hand.
“The beach house is our legacy,” she had told me. “It’s more than a place—it’s our history. Your grandparents built it. I grew up there. We brought you home there. And Victoria… she’s always wanted it.”
I hadn’t wanted to talk about it back then. I didn’t want to think about losing her. But she had insisted.
She had made sure the house would be protected.
Protected for me.
Protected from Victoria.
Back in the present, my phone buzzed again.
A message from Victoria:
I’ve told the police you’re not welcome. Don’t embarrass yourself trying to get in.
Break in… to my own home.
Instead of replying, I forwarded the message to Margaret, my mother’s lawyer, adding a brief explanation.
Her response came almost instantly:
Time to act. I have everything ready.
Another message followed—this time from Lily.
You deserve this. You were never really part of this family anyway.
I stared at the screen, a mix of frustration and bitter understanding settling in. Lily had always echoed her mother—same tone, same judgment.
I placed the phone face down, refusing to engage.
A moment later, it rang again.
My father.
I answered after a deep breath.
“Alexandra,” he began, sounding tired, “please don’t make this difficult.”
Of course. Not concern. Not questions. Just a request to keep the peace.
“Victoria is trying to protect the family,” he continued. “Maybe banning you was too much, but things have been tense. Maybe it’s better if you give everyone space.”
“By keeping me out of my own house?” I asked quietly.
He hesitated. “She said you didn’t care about it anymore… that you never visited. That she was just simplifying things.”
Simplifying.
I looked down at the documents in front of me—my mother’s signature, clear and deliberate.
“Don’t worry,” I said calmly. “I won’t cause problems.”
Relief filled his voice. “Good, that’s all I—”
“I’ll handle it my way,” I added.
He didn’t understand what that meant.
But my mother would have.
After the call ended, I sat still for a moment, the envelope heavy in my hands—a symbol of everything she had trusted me to protect.
Then I opened my laptop and booked a flight.
Destination: coastal Massachusetts.
One-way.
It was time to go home.