losers don’t deserve property—my mother used to say it like scripture, usually right before she found a way to take something from me. So when a glossy black BMW turned into my driveway at exactly nine, and my parents’ white Mercedes followed close enough to feel aggressive, I knew this wasn’t a visit. This was business.

The realtor’s BMW turned into my driveway at exactly nine, a glossy black wedge that looked like it had been polished with someone’s soul. A second later, the white Mercedes followed, nose too close to the BMW’s bumper, as if my parents couldn’t even give other people space in a parking situation.

From my office window upstairs, I watched them get out. Ms.

BMW—who I would later learn was Ms.

Brennan—emerged first, tall, sharp suit, posture like she’d swallowed a steel rod. She tapped something into her phone before even shutting the car door.

My mother climbed out of the Mercedes with a little groan, smoothing a hand over her already-perfect hair, and then immediately pointed at my garden.

Of course she did.

Even through the glass, I could see the disdain on her face as she gestured widely, the way she always did when complaining about something. Her hand flicked toward the wildflowers I’d let take over the front beds—cone flowers, daisies, bee balm, little explosions of color and messy beauty.

My aunt Helen had called them “joy weeds.” My mother thought they looked like neglect.

Her mouth moved, too far for me to hear the words, but I could imagine them well enough.

It looks abandoned.
No curb appeal.
What will the neighbors think?

My father walked around the front of the Mercedes, slower, one hand tucked into his pocket, the other shading his eyes as he examined the house like a buyer at an auction.

His face held that familiar mix of boredom and disapproval, like he couldn’t decide which emotion he wanted to use to ruin my day.

The doorbell rang.

I didn’t move.

The bell rang again, longer this time, followed by the rapid-fire staccato of my mother’s finger. Then the pounding started—her tiny fist somehow producing an impressive boom against my front door.

“Natalie! Open up!

We have business to discuss!”

Of course we did.

My parents never came to “visit.” They arrived with demands, with expectations, with agendas.

I took a sip of my coffee, the mug warm in my hands, and deliberately set it down to save my work. The code on my screen—my current project—waited patiently, more loyal and predictable than any human in my bloodline.

I hit save, closed my laptop, and took a moment to refill my mug from the French press.

Let them wait.

There was a petty pleasure in knowing they were out there stewing, in their designer clothes, on my front porch, surrounded by my “embarrassing” wildflowers. Aunt Helen would’ve enjoyed this.

By the time I finally walked downstairs, the pounding had turned into an impatient rhythm, my mother’s signature beat.

I paused for a second at the hallway mirror, catching my own reflection: messy ponytail, soft t-shirt with a faint coffee stain from yesterday, leggings, bare feet.

Somewhere in the world, someone was putting on a suit and heels and driving to an office to impress people who hated them.

I padded toward the door, coffee in hand, to answer to people who hated me.

We all had our roles.

I unlocked the deadbolt and opened the door just as my mother raised her hand for another round. Her fist stopped mid-air.

“Finally,” she huffed, sweeping past me like she owned the place, which was almost funny. Almost.

“I thought you’d died in there.”

“I must’ve misplaced my enthusiasm,” I said.

She didn’t respond, already scanning the foyer, eyes flicking over the framed photos of my aunt and me, the vintage mirror I’d restored, the old oak banister I’d spent an entire weekend sanding and staining.

Her mouth tightened as if the wood offended her.

On the porch, the realtor—Ms. Brennan—was already taking photos with a sleek tablet, her gaze moving like a scanner across my house.

She nodded to herself, turned to the side for a better angle, and snapped another shot of my porch.

The porch I’d repaired myself.
The porch my parents had never stepped onto until now.

“This is Ms. Brennan from Coldwell Banker,” my mother called from inside, voice bouncing off the walls like an unwanted announcement.

“She’s here to assess the property.”

I leaned against the doorframe.

“I’m sorry,” I said, letting my confusion drip into my voice, “what property?”

I knew. Of course I knew. This wasn’t subtle.

But I wanted to watch them say it out loud.

I wanted to see it land.

My father wandered into the living room, hands in his pockets, scanning the space with the lazy arrogance of a man who’d never in his life done a single DIY project. He looked at the restored fireplace, the built-in shelves I’d saved from the brink of ruin, the mid-century coffee table I’d dug out of a thrift store and refinished.

His upper lip curled.

“Don’t play dumb, Natalie,” he said. “We’re selling this dump.”

Behind me, the realtor stepped inside, heels clicking on the hardwood.

Up close, she radiated competence: crisp blazer, flawless makeup, hair pulled into a low chignon that probably had its own calendar reminders.

She extended her hand.

“Ms. Cross? I’m Sarah Brennan.

Your parents tell me you’ve been staying here since your aunt passed.

I’m sure this is emotional for you, but we’ll take good care of the sale. We can find you a nice apartment once we get this place market-ready.”

I looked at her hand, then at her face, then took a slow sip of my coffee instead.

“We’ll see,” I said.

Her hand dropped.

Her expression didn’t change, but there was the slightest flicker in her eyes. An awareness.

A small internal note: non-compliant daughter.

“The wallpaper has to go.” My mother’s voice came from the dining room.

“This is… what is this, seventies? Eighties? It’s hideous.”

“It’s 1940s reproduction,” I called, not moving.

“I had it custom-printed from the original pattern.”

“It looks old.” She dragged her fingers along the wall like she was testing it for disease.

“Buyers want fresh. Modern.

We’ll paint everything white. And these floors—”

She stepped back into the living room and actually clucked her tongue at the original hardwood I’d painstakingly restored, each board sanded and oiled by my hands.

“These old boards make the place look dated.

We’ll put in that gray laminate everyone loves.

It’s clean. It’s neutral. It’s what sells.”

“Laminate?” I muttered, appalled on behalf of the tree that had given its life for this flooring.

“We’ll tear down that wall,” my father added, pointing between the kitchen and dining room.

“Open concept.

That’s what people expect now. Knock all this old crap down.”

My jaw tightened.

Ms.

Brennan stood in the middle of the chaos, scribbling notes on her tablet. “The bones are good,” she said in that bright, professional voice.

“But it does need updating.

I’m thinking we list at seven-fifty after renovations.”

“Seven-fifty?” My mother laughed, a high, sharp sound. “In this neighborhood? With the market this hot?

No, no, no.

We should aim for at least nine hundred thousand. Maybe more.”

They were talking about my house like it was a dress on a clearance rack they’d found in my closet.

Something they could drag to a consignment shop for “my own good” while pocketing the cash. My fingers tightened around my mug, the ceramic suddenly too warm.

“My house,” I thought.

Not an abstract phrase.

Not an emotional attachment. A legal, documented, recorded fact.

“My house.”

My aunt Helen had left it to me five years ago. I’d sat in a lawyer’s office, hands trembling, heart shattered from losing the only person in my family who’d treated me like I was more than a failed expectation, and I’d listened as the lawyer read her will.

“To my niece, Natalie, who knows the difference between a house and a home…”

I could still hear Helen’s voice in that line, as if she’d written it sitting at her kitchen table with a cup of tea and a quiet smile.

And now my parents were walking through her—my—rooms, calling everything ugly.

I realized I was smiling, but it was the dangerous, flat kind of smile I’d learned in childhood.

The one I wore at family dinners when my mother introduced me as “the one who works with computers” and then immediately changed the subject to my brother’s surgeries or my sister’s husband’s latest promotion.

“Losers like you should rent forever,” my mother said, materializing in front of me as if summoned by the thought of my happiness.

Her eyes raked over my t-shirt, my bare feet, the mug in my hand. “You’re thirty-four, single, working some computer job from home.

You don’t need a four-bedroom house. It’s embarrassing, honestly.

What will the neighbors think?”

There it was.

The thesis of my childhood. Embarrassing. What will people think.

You don’t deserve.

“Pack your trash,” my father added, already opening the entry closet as if evaluating storage space for an open house.

“We’ll give you two weeks. That’s generous.”

Behind him, Ms.

Brennan

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