My stepmother called at eleven forty-seven in the evening on the first night I spent in the seaside villa I had purchased with my own hard-earned money. She informed me that she and my father were moving in the following day and intended to occupy the primary bedroom suite.
She added that her daughter would be taking the room with the best ocean view and told me I could leave if I had any objections to this arrangement. I simply smiled into the darkness of my new home and allowed her to drag her designer luggage across my expensive floors as if she were the rightful owner.
Eighty-three days later, while two hundred and twenty guests in formal attire waited to applaud her as the Humanitarian of the Year, I walked onto the stage with a sealed envelope. I told the audience that there was something they needed to see before they celebrated her achievements.
The ocean was incredibly loud that first night, sounding like the steady breathing of the earth beneath my windows. I had left all the doors open to enjoy the salt air and the sound of the Pacific.
The house was perched high on the cliffs of Monterey Bay with a white exterior and a cedar roof. It featured long bands of glass facing west and a terrace wide enough for grand outdoor dinners.
There were six bedrooms and a kitchen made of pale stone with custom brass fixtures. The staircase curved gently upward in a way that looked expensive without appearing to try too hard.
Every dollar used to purchase that home belonged to me, which meant more than the five million dollar price tag. I was the daughter of a woman named Geneva who clipped coupons and managed a strict budget for every holiday.
Geneva taught me that money was not a spectacle but a form of stored discipline and freedom. She used to say that wealth was essentially freedom wearing practical shoes.
On that first evening, I sat on the terrace with a glass of wine and enjoyed the silence. I had posted a single photo of the water earlier that day without providing any address or personal details.
Then the phone rang and the name Gillian appeared on the screen. She never called late unless she wanted to catch someone when they were tired and unguarded.
“Kaitlyn, I am so glad you picked up,” Gillian said as if we were in the middle of a pleasant conversation. “Paige just showed me your little beach cottage and it looks quite exciting.”