They Demanded My Yacht Suite, Then Learned Who Owned James’s Debt-heuh

My father wore my silk robe as if it had always been his.

He stood in the master suite with one hand around my crystal tumbler and the other skimming over my duvet, testing the fabric like a disappointed hotel guest.

Outside, rain freckled the glass and blurred the marina into grey strips of water and rope.

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Inside, my £300 Scotch was disappearing down his throat.

“You need to move your things to the crew quarters,” he said.

He did not raise his voice.

He did not need to.

That was always how Dad did damage, quietly enough that anyone listening from the next room might think he was being reasonable.

“James needs the master suite,” he added. “He’s had a terrible time.”

At the foot of my bed, Mum sat on the velvet bench with one cracked heel on her knee.

She had opened my £800 face cream and was rubbing it into her foot in thick white smears.

The jar had been a ridiculous purchase after a ridiculous year, one of those small rewards I bought after signing the charter contract that kept the yacht running.

To her, it was just something I had and she wanted.

“Don’t stand there gawping, Vanessa,” she said. “Your brother is stressed. You can sleep with the staff.”

The word staff landed harder than it should have.

Not because I was ashamed of my crew.

Because I knew exactly what she meant.

She meant I had worked hard enough to own the room, but not enough to deserve it when James needed comfort.

For a second, I wondered if grief could be absurd.

There they were, the parents who had erased me for three years, standing inside the life they had not helped me build.

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