The morning I pulled up to my cottage, the ocean air smelled just the same as it always did—salty and clean and full of peace.
But nothing else was right.
The driveway was jammed with cars I didn’t recognize. Music thumped from inside the house, the beat vibrating against the weathered white shutters Frank had hung with his own hands.
I sat behind the steering wheel for a long minute, my fingers frozen on the keys.
This couldn’t be right.
This cottage had been my sanctuary for twenty years. It wasn’t fancy. No grand staircase, no marble floors. Just a simple wooden home with wide windows facing the Pacific, wicker chairs that creaked in the most comforting way, and a narrow path through the garden
I didn’t inherit this place. No wealthy relative handed it over. I spent thousands of evenings bent over a sewing machine in the back room of a dry cleaner’s shop, hemming trousers, letting out seams, stitching wedding gowns for brides who couldn’t afford department store prices. Frank was already gone by then, passed away quietly in his sleep six years after we bought the land. Losing him nearly broke me, but I kept sewing because the mortgage didn’t care about grief. Month after
So when I finally climbed out of my car that morning and walked toward the front gate, my legs felt heavy.
Strangers moved through my garden like they owned it. A young couple I’d never seen before sat on my bench, sharing a drink. Children raced through my flowerbeds, trampling the marigolds I’d planted in Frank’s memory. Wet towels draped over every surface. Empty beer bottles lined the porch
I pushed open the gate, and the rusty hinge squealed. A woman I didn’t recognize looked up, frowned, and then turned back to her phone like I was invisible.
My eyes scanned the deck. The furniture I’d chosen so carefully—gone, replaced with mismatched chairs dragged from who knows where. The potted rosemary by the door had been knocked over, dirt spilled across the wood.
Then I looked through the living room window.
My heart stopped.
The photograph of Frank was missing. That framed picture had sat on the small table by the window since his funeral. It was the last thing I saw every night before I went to bed, his kind eyes and gentle smile looking back at me. And now, in its place, a giant plastic cooler sat dripping water onto the wood.
I felt something crack deep inside my chest—not a clean break, but a slow, spreading fracture.
Before I could take a breath, the front door swung open.
Chloe stepped out.
She was barefoot, her hair pulled into a messy bun, holding an iced drink in one hand. Expensive sunglasses sat perched on her head, the kind that cost more than I used to earn in a month. She looked at me like I was a misplaced piece of luggage.
But what caught my eye wasn’t her face.
It was the apron she wore.
My apron.
The soft cotton fabric I had stitched myself over thirty years ago, back when my eyes were still sharp enough to thread a needle without squinting. I had embroidered tiny blue flowers along each pocket, one petal at a time, during those long nights when sewing was the only thing that kept my hands busy and my mind from drowning in loneliness.
She was wearing my apron like it belonged to her.
Chloe lifted her sunglasses and squinted at me. Then she laughed—a loud, careless sound that made several people in the yard turn to look.
“What’s this old freeloader doing back here?” she announced, her voice cutting through the music. “There’s no room for you anymore.”
For a heartbeat, the yard fell silent.
Then several members of her family burst into laughter. Her mother, a woman I’d met only twice before, stepped forward and looked me up and down with open disdain.
“So you’re Brandon’s mother?” she said, her tone dripping. “I expected someone… much more impressive.”
I kept my voice calm—the kind of calm you learn after decades of swallowing pain and smiling through it. “Where’s my son?”
“At work,” Chloe answered casually. “Unlike you, he actually contributes something. He provides for his family.”
She gestured toward the crowded house. “Every bedroom is taken. You’ll only make everyone uncomfortable if you stay. Honestly, it’s better if you just… go.”
Everyone.
I looked past her, into the home I had built. Complete strangers sprawled across my sofa. A child ran down the hallway, sticky fingers trailing along the wall. A man I didn’t know opened my refrigerator and pulled out a carton of orange juice, drinking straight from the container.
Then I noticed it.
By the hallway, near the door to my bedroom, sat two oversized black garbage bags.
At first, I thought they were trash waiting to be taken out.