I remembered crying, blurting out something about how we should be talking about treatments, not property. But she’d shaken her head, stubborn as always.

“Listen to me. Victoria has been trying to get her hands on that house since the day she married your father. I can see it. The way she looks at it—like it’s not a home, but a prize. I won’t let that happen. I won’t let her take everything.”

She’d reached over to the bedside table, picked up a pen, and started signing papers as Margaret, her lawyer and long-time friend, quietly explained the trust structure. I hadn’t understood all the legal language then. I didn’t need to. Mom had made one thing absolutely clear: the beach house would be protected.

Protected for me.

Protected from Victoria.

I blinked back to the present, my eyes stinging.

I’d been 20 when Mom died. Twenty and not remotely prepared to become the keeper of our family’s most sacred place. Victoria had wasted no time stepping into the void my mother left behind—redecorating, rearranging, rewriting the family’s story until it looked like she’d always been there and Mom had just been some short-lived draft of our lives.