Son Buys Parents A £425,000 Seafront Home — Then His Sister Takes Over-heuh

I bought the seafront house quietly because that was how my parents had lived their whole lives.

They never made a performance out of sacrifice.

They did not announce when they skipped holidays so I could have school shoes that fitted.

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They did not tell relatives when they ate toast for dinner because a bill had come in early.

They did not complain when they gave Fiona help after help after help, even when she never seemed to remember it the next time she needed something.

So when I finally had the money to do something proper for them, I did not want a party.

I did not want speeches.

I wanted peace.

The house was cream-coloured, broad-fronted, and close enough to the sea that salt gathered on the railings overnight.

It had blue shutters, a wraparound porch, a narrow back kitchen with an electric kettle already waiting on the counter, and windows that turned silver in the afternoon light.

To anyone else, it might have looked like a luxury purchase.

To me, it looked like a long apology.

My mother, Irene Sinclair, stood in the hallway the first day with both hands pressed to her chest.

She did not walk in straight away.

She hovered on the threshold as if the house were too fine to step into without permission.

“Mum,” I said gently, “it’s yours.”

She looked at me then, and her eyes filled.

My father, Samuel, pretended to inspect the front door lock.

He had always done that.

Whenever he was overwhelmed, he became practical.

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