She Found Her Mother Selling Her Texas House While She Served Overseas-myhoa

My phone screamed at 3:14 in the morning inside a military barracks in Germany.

The room was silent before that, except for the low hum of the heater and rain tapping the window in a steady, miserable rhythm.

I had been halfway asleep in a chair because I was too tired to make it properly into bed.

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The message on my screen made every nerve in my body go cold.

Austin property. Interior motion detected.

For a second, I just stared at it.

My house in Texas had been empty for six months.

I was stationed overseas, my furniture was covered, my fridge was cleaned out, and the only reason the place still had power was because my dad had always told me an empty house should never look abandoned.

The lawn company had a code for the side gate.

I had my own keys locked in my personal gear.

My mother, Victoria, had the only spare key.

That was the thought that made me sit upright so fast the chair behind me slammed into the desk.

I had told myself giving her a key was practical.

She lived close enough to check the mailbox.

She could walk through after bad weather.

She could make sure a pipe had not burst, or a window had not cracked, or a storm had not pushed a branch through the roof.

That was what daughters told themselves when they wanted a mother to be better than she had been.

My mother had always known how to make me feel guilty for doubting her.

She did it with a sigh, with one hand on her chest, with that soft little voice that made every concern sound like an insult.

I opened the security app.

The kitchen camera blinked alive first.

There she was.

Victoria stood at my counter in the middle of the night in Texas, pouring coffee into my favorite mug, the white one with the chipped handle that my father used to steal from me whenever he visited.

She was not startled.

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