Her Son Took Over Her Beach House, Then She Opened Her Purse-thuyhien

I drove four hours to the coast that Friday afternoon because I wanted one quiet week by the water.

That was all.

Not a celebration.

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Not a family visit.

Not a chance to sit around pretending old hurts had softened just because everybody was older.

I wanted coffee on the deck before sunrise, a paperback in the hammock, and the sound of waves hitting the shore while the sand was still cool enough for bare feet.

The paper cup from the gas station was still warm in my console when I turned off the highway.

The air smelled like salt, pine, and hot asphalt.

For most people, that might not sound like much.

For me, it sounded like proof I had survived.

At seventy-one, peace was not something I stumbled into.

I protected it.

I had bought that beach house after forty years of hospital work, and I mean work in the kind of way your body remembers even after your last shift is over.

Double weekends.

Overnight calls.

Holiday mornings under fluorescent lights.

Aching feet in nursing shoes that looked fine from the outside but had gone soft in the soles.

I had stood beside beds while families prayed, argued, wept, lied, forgave each other, refused to forgive each other, and waited for machines to tell them what their hearts already knew.

When my husband died, that house became the one place where nobody needed me to be useful.

I could sit on the deck with my coffee and not explain myself to anybody.

I could leave a mug in the sink until noon.

I could listen to the waitress at the little seafood place off the highway tell me she still remembered my husband’s fried shrimp order, and I could smile without breaking in half.

That house was not large.

It was not fancy.

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