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She Sold My Beach House Behind My Back

The text came in at 6:14 a.m., just as Bella Carter was deciding whether the coffee she’d poured forty minutes earlier was still worth drinking.

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She was in scrubs, shoes kicked off under the kitchen island, with a headache pressing against the back of her eyes and an operating room report open on her tablet.

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The house was quiet except for the distant hum of the refrigerator and the soft electronic chirp of her daughter’s game console, still running on the couch where Milo had fallen asleep before school.

Bella looked down at her phone.

We planned the family reunion at your beach house.

47 people.

4 days.

Stock the fridge by Friday.

No greeting.

No question.

No apology.

Just a command.

For a second, Bella thought she might still be half asleep, that her mind had added the arrogance by mistake.

Then she read it again, and the cold certainty settled in.

Paige.

Her younger sister had always had a remarkable talent for treating other people’s boundaries like temporary suggestions.

But this was a new level even for her.

Across the room, Milo shifted under the blanket, one sock hanging off her heel, dark braid half loose from sleep.

Eleven years old and still soft around the edges in that heartbreaking way that made Bella want to protect the world from landing on her too hard.

Bella stared at the message until the screen dimmed.

Then she unlocked it and typed a single word.

No.

The typing bubbles appeared immediately.

Stopped.

Returned.

Paused again.

Then the answer came.

Lol.

We’re coming anyway.

What are you gonna do—call the HOA?

Bella set the phone down face-first on the counter as if it had burned her.

“Everything okay?” Milo asked groggily.

Bella turned.

Milo was rubbing her eyes with both fists.

“Yeah, kiddo,” Bella said automatically.

“Just family stuff.”

Milo nodded like she understood exactly what that meant.

She did.

Bella was forty-two, a neurosurgeon in Jacksonville, the woman colleagues called when a case was complicated, time-sensitive, and terrifying.

She could spend six hours standing over an open skull without losing the steadiness in her hands.

But something in her family dynamic still had the power to knock the air out of her, reducing her to the younger sister and dutiful daughter they assumed would always absorb the impact of their decisions.

Ethan came in from the garage carrying a basket of laundry and stopped when he saw her face.

“Paige?” he asked.

Bella didn’t answer.

He set the basket down quietly.

“What now?”

Bella handed him the phone.

He read the messages once, expression flattening in that controlled way it did when he was angry enough to be careful.

Ethan didn’t believe in loud threats.

He believed in documentation.

“Absolutely not,” he said.

Milo wasn’t Bella’s biological child.

She wasn’t Ethan’s, either—not fully, not in the simple genetic sense.

Ethan had been raising her alone by the time Bella came into their lives.

Her biological mother had disappeared into a mess of addiction and instability years earlier, leaving Ethan to do the job with too little help and too little rest.

Bella married Ethan when Milo was five.

She adopted her that same year because the word step made Milo flinch, as though it implied she could still be returned.

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