03/23/2026
Jealous stepmothers!!!!
My stepmother called and told me, “You’re banned from the family beach house. I changed every lock.” She sounded almost delighted. I simply replied, “Thanks for the update.” What she didn’t know was that my mom had placed the house in a private trust under my name before she passed away.
The first thing that caught my attention was the sunset reflecting against the glass of my apartment window.
It had been one of those draining days when the city felt like it was grinding me down piece by piece. My laptop sat open on the kitchen counter, an unfinished email staring back at me like an accusation. I stood by the window with my phone against my ear, watching the sharp outlines of skyscrapers cut into a sky streaked with orange and pink.
Then the voice I dreaded most sliced through the quiet.
“You’re banned from the family beach house forever.”
Diana’s words snapped through the phone like a whip. My hand tightened around the device.
“What?”
“I had all the locks replaced,” she continued slowly, savoring the moment. I could imagine her polished nails tapping smugly on the kitchen island. “Don’t even think about showing up. That’s what happens when you ruin Madeline’s graduation party.”
I looked at my reflection in the window. My dark hair was twisted into a careless bun, a loose sweater hanging off my shoulder. My eyes carried the familiar shadows of sleepless nights. Far below, a horn blared. Somewhere above, a plane crossed the sky.
“The party,” I said slowly, curious how far she’d push this, “the one you never invited me to?”
She snorted.
“The same party where you told everyone I was too busy to come to my own stepsister’s celebration?”
My voice stayed even. Years had taught me that showing emotion around Diana was like feeding a predator.
She laughed harshly. “Stop pretending, Rebecca. Everyone knows you’re jealous of Madeline. And now you’re never stepping foot in that beach house again.”
Jealous. Her favorite accusation since the day she married my father.
In the reflection of the window, another image drifted into my mind. A wide porch with white railings. An old rocking chair. The endless Atlantic glittering beyond.
The beach house.
Mom’s laughter echoed through memory.
“Rebecca, look at that wave. It’s bigger than you were when you were five.”
I blinked the memory away.
“That house isn’t yours to ban me from,” I said quietly.
“Oh yes it is,” Diana answered triumphantly. “Your father transferred it to me last month. It’s mine now. And you’re not welcome. You’re just like your mother. Always thinking the world owes you something.”
Her insult barely landed anymore.
A small smile formed. “Thanks for letting me know about the locks,” I said.
She paused, confused. “What do you mean by—”
I ended the call.
Silence settled around me. Outside, the city continued its endless rhythm. Inside, there was only the soft hum of appliances and Diana’s echoing words.
Banned from the beach house.
I walked into my small office nook and knelt beside the file cabinet. The bottom drawer slid open.
Inside was the envelope. A thick manila folder, worn at the edges. My mother’s handwriting stretched across the front.
REBECCA. BEACH HOUSE DOCUMENTS. IMPORTANT.
The word important was underlined three times.
I carefully opened it. Inside were the trust papers my mother signed three months before she d/ie/d. Behind them rested the official deed to the beach house.
She had known exactly what Diana would try.
My phone buzzed again.
Diana had sent another message. “I already told the local police you’re not welcome there. Don’t hu/mili/ate yourself by trying to break in.”
Break in. To my own house.
I forwarded the message to Evelyn, my mother’s lawyer.
Her reply came instantly. “Time to play our hand. Everything is ready.”
Before I could respond, another message appeared on my screen from an unfamiliar number…
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