“I have insurance, Mom. And neighbors.”
“Neighbors?” My father scoffed. “You mean the old widow a mile down the road? She can barely see past her porch.”
He reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a glossy brochure. He slid it across the table. It stopped right in front of my tea mug.
The cover showed a smiling elderly couple playing golf under a palm tree, their teeth impossibly white. The text read: “Sun Ridge Luxury Living, Scottsdale, Arizona.”
“What is this?” I asked, looking up at him.
“Our future,” my mother said, reaching out to touch my hand. Her skin was cold. “Morgan, your father’s arthritis is getting worse. The damp Seattle air is killing him. We need a dry climate.”
“And Paige,” she continued, “she has this wonderful opportunity to launch her boutique, but she needs investors. The banks are being difficult because of the economy.”
“And you want me to do what?” I asked, though the pit in my stomach told me I already knew the answer.
“Sell the house,” Conrad said.
The mask dropped completely.
“I have a friend, a developer. He loves this location. He is willing to pay cash. Today, we sell this dump, buy the condo in Scottsdale, fund Paige’s business, and put a nice chunk in your savings account. Everyone wins.”
“I am not selling,” I said. My voice was quiet, but it was firm.
“Don’t be selfish,” Paige snapped, looking up from her phone for the first time. “You’re going to be in Maine looking at rocks. Why do you need a beach house? Mom and Dad deserve to retire in peace. You’re hoarding this place like a dragon sitting on gold.”
“They can retire wherever they want,” I said, looking at Paige. “But not on my dime. Grandpa left this house to me. He made me promise to protect it. He knew you would sell it the moment he was in the ground.”
My father slammed his hand on the table. The teacups rattled.
“Arthur was a senile old fool. He didn’t understand finance. Look at you, Morgan. You’re 35, single, making pennies as a researcher. You’re holding on to a sinking ship. I am trying to save you.”
“I don’t need saving, Dad. I need you to respect my decision. The answer is no.”
The silence that followed was heavy, suffocating.
My father stood up, his face turning a shade of red that clashed with his expensive tie. He leaned over me, his cologne overpowering the smell of the sea.
“You have always been an ungrateful child. We gave you everything. Private schools, a car when you turned 16, and this is how you repay us? By letting your parents suffer in the cold while you hoard a house you barely use?”
“I live here, Dad. It’s my home, and I paid for my own car, if you remember. You leased the BMW for Paige.”
He stared at me with pure venom. For a second, I thought he might hit me.
Then he abruptly straightened up. He buttoned his jacket.
“Fine. Have it your way.”
He gestured to my mother and sister.
“Let’s go. She’s made her choice.”
My mother looked at me with sad, disappointed eyes, her greatest weapon.
“I just hope you don’t regret this, Morgan. Family is all we have.”
They walked to the door, but the air in the room had shifted. It wasn’t just disappointment anymore. It was malice.
My father stopped at the threshold, his hand on the doorknob. He turned back to look at me, and his expression chilled me to the bone. It wasn’t the look of a father. It was the look of a businessman staring at a bad investment.
“You know,” Conrad said, his voice dangerously low, “we invested a lot in you, Morgan. Tuition, braces, summer camps. We thought you would amount to something, something that could contribute to this family’s legacy.”
“I am a published scientist, Dad,” I said. “I contribute to the world.”
He scoffed, a short, sharp sound.
“You play with mud. You are an investment that hasn’t paid off. And now when we need you, when the family needs you, you turn your back.”
“I am not turning my back on you. I am protecting my home.”
“It’s not a home,” he spat. “It’s a resource, and you are wasting it.”
He opened the door, letting the cold wind rush in.
“Don’t expect us to visit you in Maine. We’ll be too busy trying to survive while you play hermit.”
They left.
I watched them go, standing in the open doorway until the taillights of the sedan disappeared around the bend. My hands were shaking, but not from fear. It was pure adrenaline. I felt like I had just been in a fistfight.
I locked the door. Then I bolted it. I leaned my forehead against the cool wood and breathed.
Liquidity.
The word echoed in my mind. He needed money fast. And he had just realized that his easiest source of cash—my house—was locked away. Conrad wasn’t the type to accept no. He viewed no as a negotiation tactic.
He would be back.
Or worse, he wouldn’t come back. He would do something underhanded.
I looked around my living room. My books. My grandfather’s chair. My life.
“They are not taking this,” I said aloud.
I grabbed my keys and headed for the door. I had 48 hours before my flight. I needed to fortify the castle.
I drove into town, my mind racing. The small coastal town was quiet, the tourists long gone for the season. I parked in front of the electronics store, feeling a sense of urgency that bordered on paranoia.
I bought four high-end security cameras, small black cubes that could be hidden easily. I bought extra batteries, a Wi-Fi extender, and a mobile hotspot device in case they tried to cut the internet line. The clerk looked at me with concern as I piled the items on the counter.
“Expecting trouble?” he asked.
“Just raccoons,” I lied. “Big ones.”
I spent the rest of the afternoon and evening installing them. I felt like a spy in my own home. I drilled a hole in the back of a hollowed-out encyclopedia on the bookshelf and nestled a camera inside, the lens peering out through the spine. That one covered the entire living room.
I placed another one on top of the kitchen cabinets, hidden behind a decorative ceramic vase. That one covered the back door and the kitchen table where contracts would be signed.
The outdoor cameras were trickier. I had to get a ladder. I hid one in the eaves of the front porch, painted to match the wood. The last one I placed inside an old birdhouse on the oak tree facing the driveway. I angled it perfectly to catch license plates.
I connected them all to a cloud server. I set up alerts on my phone.
Motion detected.
I tested it. I walked in front of the birdhouse. Three seconds later, my phone buzzed. A crystal-clear image of me, looking worried and tired, appeared on the screen.
It worked.
I sat on the floor of my living room, surrounded by drill bits and sawdust. I felt safer, but also incredibly sad. I was 35 years old, rigging my childhood home with surveillance equipment because I couldn’t trust my own parents not to rob me.
This wasn’t normal. I knew that.
But as I looked at the dark windows, imagining my father’s desperate face, I knew it was necessary.
The next morning, my last day in Washington, I had one final meeting. I drove to Port Angeles to meet Silas.
Silas was my oldest friend. We had survived high school together, bonding over being the outcasts in a town of fishermen and loggers. Now he was a ruthless real estate attorney with a sharp mind and a soft spot for conservation.
We met at a diner near the harbor. I slid into the booth opposite him. He looked at my face and frowned.
“You look like you’ve been to war,” Silas said, signaling the waitress for coffee.
“I feel like it,” I admitted. “They came yesterday. They want to sell the house to a developer. Dad is in trouble. Silas, I heard him on the phone. He owes money to someone scary.”
Silas nodded grimly.
“That tracks. I’ve heard rumors. Conrad has been seen at the casinos down south more often than usual, and he’s been trying to leverage his own assets, but the banks are tapping him out.”
“He’s desperate,” I said. “And he thinks he can bully me into selling.”
“He can’t sell it legally,” Silas said, taking a sip of coffee. “The deed is in your name solely.”
“I know. But if he forges my signature, if he finds a shady notary… I’m going to be 3,000 miles away in Maine.”
Silas tapped

