My Parents Remodelled My Holiday Home And Planned To Move Family In-heuh

I used to believe Christmas announced itself by smell before anything else.

Not by carols, or cards, or the first neighbour who went too early with lights around the front window.

For me it was always cinnamon, pine needles, roast meat, candle wax, and the faint chemical sweetness of my mother’s best perfume.

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It was the scent of stepping into my parents’ house and becoming smaller.

Every December, I parked outside their semi-detached home, turned off the engine, and sat for a moment with my hands still on the wheel.

Inside, I knew exactly who I would be.

Not Claire Bennett, the woman who had built a company from a spare bedroom and sold it before thirty-three.

Not Claire Bennett, who had bought a modest but beautiful coastal house with her own money, painted the front door blue, and spent quiet weekends there listening to the wind press against the windows.

Inside that house, I would only be Claire.

The daughter who worked too much.

The daughter who did not understand family.

The daughter who, according to my father after a drink or two, thought she was doing better than she really was.

That Christmas, I had almost stayed home.

My flat was warm, the rain was tapping softly on the glass, and I had no desire to stand in a crowded room while people asked me whether I was still doing that work thing.

Then my mum texted.

It would mean a lot if you came.

A few minutes later, another message arrived.

Your father has done the ham.

Then the third.

The children keep asking about Aunt Claire.

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