The Cruise, The Greenhouse, And The Deed That Ended Their Lie-thuyhien

The call came while rainwater was falling through the ceiling of the house my mother had left me.

I had a mixing bowl under the leak, a towel pressed along the baseboard, and a phone balanced against my shoulder when Susan’s voice came slicing through the speaker from the other side of the world.

Behind her, I heard wind, laughter, and the clink of glasses, the careless music of people who were floating on blue water while my hallway plaster bubbled brown.

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“You are nothing but a freeloader, Natalie,” she said, loud enough that I could almost see the curl of her mouth.

Then she added the sentence that finally burned through whatever was left of my patience: “Living in our house like you own the place.”

I looked around the foyer while she kept talking, and every inch of it answered her better than I could.

The staircase had been sanded and sealed by my mother’s hands during the last summer before she got sick.

The stained glass over the door still caught the afternoon light in blue and amber because I had paid a specialist to repair the cracked leading after the funeral.

The lemon oil smell in the woodwork was my mother’s smell, the lavender drying in the sunroom was my mother’s habit, and the deed in the fireproof box upstairs carried only my name.

I did not scream into the phone, because screaming would have made Susan feel important.

I pressed the red button, set the phone on the console table, and let the sudden silence fill the foyer until the only sound was water dropping into the bowl.

Then I walked to the front door and turned the deadbolt.

The click sounded small, but it landed in my chest like a verdict.

My father came through one of those doors six months after my mother died.

Brian sat at the kitchen table where she used to roll pie dough and told me his business had collapsed, his rent was impossible, and he and Susan only needed a place for a little while.

He cried when he said it, not loudly, just enough to make me remember all the times I had wanted him to be softer when I was a child.

“Six months, Nat,” he promised, with both hands wrapped around a mug he never drank from.

I was twenty-two and still desperate to believe I had one parent left.

So I said yes.

I gave him and Susan the master bedroom because it felt cruel to make my father sleep in the guest suite after a business failure.

I moved my clothes, my books, and my drafting table into smaller rooms and told myself a house this large had room for mercy.

The first time Susan called my guest suite the servants’ quarters, I laughed because I thought she was making a bad joke.

She was not.

She told Kelsey to keep her shoes out of “Natalie’s little area” and told dinner guests that I was helping my father with the property until I figured out my own plans.

When I confronted Dad, he looked toward the ceiling like Susan might be listening through the floorboards.

He whispered that he had told her he bought the Painted Lady from my mother’s estate.

He said Susan would feel like a guest if she knew the truth.

I remember staring at him and waiting for the shame to appear on his face.

It never did.

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