She Changed The Locks Before They Arrived At 2 A.M.-heuh

She said, “My parents are moving in Saturday.” I said no, changed the locks and waited. When their truck pulled into my driveway at 2 A.M., nothing went as planned -and everything stopped cold.

Melissa announced it while cutting through her lunch as though she were discussing the weather.

“Frankly, Margaret, my parents are moving into your spare rooms next Saturday. We’ve already told them yes.”

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There was no pause after it.

No polite little breath where a question might have lived.

No shame, either.

She simply placed the sentence on my kitchen table and expected me to arrange my life around it.

The rain had been tapping at the back windows all afternoon, not hard, just that fine grey drizzle that makes the garden look tired.

The kettle had clicked off a few minutes before, and my tea was still steaming in the mug Robert used to tease me for favouring because it was too big and chipped on one side.

My son David sat opposite me, his shoulders rounded, his eyes fixed on a thread at the edge of the tablecloth.

He had always looked away when life asked him to stand up straight.

As a child, he looked at his shoes when he had broken something.

As a teenager, he looked into his cereal bowl when he had been caught out.

Now, as a grown man with a wife and children of his own, he stared at fabric while Melissa volunteered my home to her parents.

My home.

Not a spare asset.

Not a waiting room for people who had run out of other options.

Not a building with bedrooms to be reassigned by committee.

It was the house Robert and I had poured thirty years into.

We had chosen the kitchen cupboards after three separate arguments and one silent car ride.

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