“I went to my beach house to relax on my vacation, but the master room and kitchen were under construction. My son said: “I’m remodeling so my wife and her parents can live here.” I opened my property file and called my lawyer. The next morning, they knocked desperately on my door at 6 A.M…”
When I arrived at my beach house that Friday afternoon, Khloe was already on the deck giving orders to three workers as if she owned the place.
She didn’t greet me. She didn’t even turn her head when the car stopped in front of the entrance. She just raised her hand, pointing toward the kitchen and shouted something about the tile needing to arrive before Monday.
I felt a chill run down my spine that had nothing to do with the sea breeze. I got out of the car slowly, watching. The front door was wide open.
There were bags of cement stacked next to my pots of geraniums, the ones I planted 5 years ago with my own hands. The sound of a drill pierced the air from somewhere inside the house. My house.
The house I bought after 40 years of working double shifts as a nurse at General Hospital. The house I paid for with my sweat after my husband died and left me with nothing but debts and broken promises. Chloe finally saw me.
She smiled. That smile that always made me nervous. Too wide.
Too perfect. Olga, I’m so glad you’re here, she said as if she were doing me a favor by acknowledging my presence on my own property. Matthew is inside supervising the kitchen.
You’ll see. It’s going to be beautiful. I didn’t answer.
I walked toward the entrance, feeling my 71-year-old legs protest with every step. I had driven 4 hours from the city specifically to rest, to listen to the waves, to be alone with my thoughts and my memories. I had dreamed about this week for months, planned every detail.
The morning walks on the beach, the books I would read in the hammock, the silence I so desperately needed after an exhausting year. What I found inside took my breath away. The kitchen no longer existed.
Or rather, it half existed. The cabinets I installed 3 years ago had been torn from the walls. The tile floor I had chosen so carefully was covered in dust and debris.
The walls showed huge holes where the paintings from my Thursday afternoon art classes once hung. The refrigerator was in the middle of the living room, unplugged, its door ajar. The smell of dampness and fresh cement hit me like a slap.
What happened next changed everything… continues on the next page.
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