My father, Robert Hayes, stood frozen in the doorway of the seaside house I had bought for my parents’ fortieth anniversary, one hand still resting on the brass doorknob as if the metal itself might explain what was happening. In his other hand he held a small paper grocery bag with a loaf of sourdough sticking out the top and a bunch of green onions bent at the stems. Behind him, beyond the low stone wall and the sloping strip of pale grass, the Monterey shoreline was being itself—gray water, white spray, waves smashing against the rocks with the indifference only the ocean can manage.

It should have been an ordinary morning. The kind my mother had always dreamed of. Coffee on the porch. Sea air in the curtains. My father pretending to read the paper while he really watched the horizon.

Instead, my mother was standing in the gravel driveway in her slippers and lavender cardigan, mascara running in two black lines down her cheeks, crying so hard she kept pressing her fist against her mouth as if she could physically hold the sound inside.

“This isn’t your house,” Daniel Mercer said again, louder this time, like my father was hard of hearing instead of humiliated. “You can’t just walk in whenever you want.”

When my mother called me, her voice was shaking so violently I thought at first somebody had died.

“Ethan,” she said. “You need to come right now.”

I was in San Jose, finishing a late breakfast meeting and half listening to a finance director explain a vendor problem I did not care about. I was already on my feet before she finished the sentence.

“What happened?”

“He changed the locks.”

For a second I genuinely did not understand the words. My mind kept searching for a more reasonable arrangement of them. A locksmith. A break-in. A misunderstanding with the cleaning company. Something practical.

“Who changed the locks?”

A pause. A breath that cracked in the middle.

“Daniel.”

Forty-five minutes later I turned into the driveway too fast, tires crunching gravel hard enough to make one of the gulls on the stone wall jerk into the air. Daniel stood on the porch with his arms crossed and a ring of keys hanging from one finger, jingling them once in a small lazy motion that made my vision sharpen at the edges. My sister Claire stood a step behind him, pale, rigid, arms folded over herself. She would not look at me.