They Tried To Take My Lake House For 20 Guests — I Changed The Locks-Teptep

By the time Claire reached her flat that Thursday night, her legs felt as if someone had poured wet cement into her shoes.

She had worked twelve hours on a hospital ward, most of it standing, most of it moving between beds, call bells, tired relatives, and the thin mechanical rhythm of machines keeping people steady.

Her uniform carried the sour mix of disinfectant, instant coffee, and other people’s fear.

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Rain had been falling all evening, not heavy enough to be dramatic, just steady enough to make the pavements shine and soak the cuffs of her trousers when she stepped out of the car.

She sat for a moment before going inside, forehead almost touching the steering wheel, because sometimes the quiet before opening the front door was the only quiet she got.

Then her phone buzzed again.

It had been buzzing since she had left the hospital.

She had ignored it in the car park, then at the traffic lights, then on the last road before home.

But now it was in her hand, lighting up with the family group chat.

Her dad had tagged her three times.

Dad: We’re using your lake house this weekend — 20 guests.

Mum: Fill the fridge and behave.

A second later, her younger brother Kyle added a row of laughing faces.

That was Kyle’s role in the family.

He never started the fire, but he always enjoyed the warmth.

Claire stared at the screen until the words stopped looking like words and became what they really were: an instruction.

Not a request.

Not a conversation.

An instruction issued by people who had spent her entire life confusing access with love.

The lake house was not theirs.

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