Easter at my parents’ house always came dressed as something softer than it was.
From the front step, it looked almost tender.
There was thin spring light on the glass, the smell of warm ham drifting through the hallway, and a bunch of tulips set in the middle of the dining table as if flowers could hold a family together.

Inside, the air was different.
It carried lemon cleaner, coffee, and the faint metallic sharpness of people keeping their tempers folded away until the guests sat down.
My stepmother had laid out the good plates, the pastel ones that only appeared at Easter.
The napkins had been folded into stiff little shapes beside the cutlery.
A tea towel was over the kitchen chair, the kettle had just clicked off, and my father was pretending to be busy near the stove.
He turned when I came in and gave me the smile he used when he had already decided I had done something wrong but had not chosen the charge yet.
“Where’s your coat?” he asked.
I looked down at my blouse, then towards the open window.
“It’s not cold.”
“You’ll catch cold,” he said.
There was no use explaining that the weather was mild, that I had driven over with the heater off, that I was a grown woman capable of knowing whether I needed a coat.
In my family, practical questions were hardly ever practical.
They were little tests.
Would I explain too much.
Would I sound defensive.
Would I make myself small enough for the room.
“I’m fine,” I said, and kissed his cheek.
He nodded towards the worktop.
“Could you put the rolls out? Your brother will be late.”
Of course Mark would be late.
Mark was late in the way some people are loud.
It became part of the atmosphere before they even arrived.
He was late to meals, late to apologies, late to noticing damage unless the damage became inconvenient for him.
Since he and Jenna had children, he had managed to turn fatherhood into a permanent announcement of hardship.
Lily needed this.
Noah refused that.
The school run was chaos.
The mortgage was heavy.
The house was never quiet.
The world, according to Mark, was forever asking too much of him and not nearly enough of everyone else.
I carried the rolls to the dining table and began placing them beside the butter dish.
The room looked almost pretty, which made it worse.
My mum’s old china cabinet stood against the far wall, polished but never quite shining.
The glass door caught my reflection and put her things around me.
Her plates.
Her lace runner.
Her little blue jug at the back that nobody used because everyone was too afraid to break it.
Upstairs, in the linen cupboard, her beach towels were still folded in a neat stack.
They had not been used since the summer before she died.
Sometimes, when I visited, I opened the cupboard just to breathe in the faint smell of lavender sheets and salt that no washing powder could entirely remove.
Mum had been gone two years.
The strange thing was not that I missed her.
The strange thing was that the house still seemed to remember her better than the people did.
Mark arrived twenty minutes later, and the front door told us before he did.
It opened hard, shut harder, and then his voice filled the hallway.
“Honestly, you lot have no idea what this morning was like.”
He came into the dining room in a rush of cologne and complaint.
He kissed the air somewhere near my cheek, slapped Dad on the shoulder, and sat as if the chair had been waiting to disappoint him.
“Football at eight,” he said, though no one had asked. “Lily crying because her socks felt wrong. Noah refusing eggs unless they were cut into dinosaurs. I’m keeping this family afloat by a thread.”
Jenna came in behind him.
She looked tired in the quiet way people look tired when they have stopped expecting anyone to notice.
She smiled at me, but it did not quite reach her eyes.
The children were not with them yet.
Mark explained that they were with a sitter until dessert because the schedule was mad and he was doing everything.
Jenna did not correct him.
She took the seat beside him, folded her hands in her lap, and looked down at the plate as if it required concentration.
I poured coffee.
I had learned long ago that at my parents’ table, silence was not peace.
It was only the space before someone decided which part of me to pick up and examine.
Sometimes it was my flat.
Why did I still rent.
Why did I not buy somewhere sensible.
Sometimes it was my work.
Was it stable.
Was there a pension.
Was I thinking long-term.
Sometimes it was the general shape of my life, which Mark referred to as my “lifestyle” with the same voice he used for stains on a carpet.
The first twenty minutes passed with ordinary things.
Ham.
Coffee.
Weather.
Traffic.
A story about Lily refusing a jumper.
A small complaint from my stepmother that the supermarket had moved everything around again, as if this was a personal insult against civilisation.
I almost let myself breathe.
Then Mark wiped his mouth with his napkin and leaned back.
“We should probably talk about the house.”
No one asked which house.
There was only one house that made the room go still like that.
The beach house stood two hours up the coast, in a place where the wind carried sand against the steps and the windows rattled at night.
It was not grand.
It did not have gates or a sweeping drive or anything that would make strangers slow down to look.
It had weathered boards, wide windows, a narrow kitchen with chipped tiles, and a porch swing that creaked even when nobody sat on it.
Mum had loved it.
Not loudly, because Mum did very little loudly.
She loved it in packed lunches, spare jumpers, towels warming over the bannister, and cups of tea carried out to the porch before rain came in from the sea.
Technically, it had been hers.
People in my family liked to say that in the past tense, as if death had turned her wishes into something foggy and negotiable.
But Mum had never been foggy.
She had been gentle, not vague.
Those were not the same thing.
I put my mug down carefully.
“What about it?”
Mark spread his hands, already wearing the patient expression of a man who had practised sounding reasonable in the car.
“It makes sense for it to stay with the family line,” he said. “The kids have memories there.”
I glanced at Jenna.
Her eyes were on her plate.
“It is staying in the family,” I said.
He gave a small laugh.
“Come on. You know what I mean.”
“No,” I said. “Say what you mean.”
Dad shifted at the head of the table.
My stepmother reached for her glass but did not lift it.
Mark’s smile thinned.
“You barely use it. And you don’t even have kids. I do. It’s just logical.”
The room changed then.
Not dramatically.
No thunderclap.
No chair overturned.
Just that small, terrible tightening that happens when everyone understands a line has been crossed and most people decide not to name it.
“Logical for whom?” I asked.
“For everyone,” Mark said. “For the future. A house like that shouldn’t just sit with one person who doesn’t really need it.”
“One person meaning me.”
“I mean I have a family,” he said, leaning forward. “I have children. They should have something one day. You don’t.”
He did not shout it.
That almost made it worse.
He laid it down between us like a receipt.
Here was the cost of me.
No husband.
No children.
No claim.
My father cleared his throat.
“Mark’s not completely wrong.”
I looked at him.
He was staring at the serving dish, not at me.
“A legacy property should go where it does the most good,” he said.
There it was.
The phrase that made greed sound like duty.
I felt my fingers curl around the edge of my napkin.
“Did you invite me here for brunch,” I asked, “or for an ambush?”
My stepmother’s mouth tightened.
“Don’t be dramatic.”
Mark gave a short laugh.
“See? This is exactly it. We can never have a normal conversation with you.”
“Because you are asking me to hand over my house.”
“I’m asking you to think beyond yourself.”
The kettle in the kitchen clicked again, though nobody had touched it.
It was a tiny ordinary sound, and for some reason it made the silence after his words feel even more ridiculous.
“Mum would have wanted her grandchildren to use it,” Mark said. “Not have it wasted on empty rooms and little weekend visits.”
That was when the coldness moved through me.
Not rage.
Not yet.
Something cleaner.
He had used our mother’s voice as if it were his to borrow.
He had made her absence useful to him.
“You don’t get to speak for her,” I said.
His eyes sharpened.
“And you do?”
“I am saying she wrote down what she wanted.”
“You always acted like you were the only one who mattered to her.”
I turned to my father.
Not because I expected much.
Because some childish part of me wanted to give him one clean chance to do the right thing in front of witnesses.
“Say something true,” I said.
For a second, he looked almost tired.
Then his face closed.
“Your brother is trying to think like an adult. Maybe you should, too.”
It is strange how a sentence can take you backwards.
I was not only sitting at Easter brunch anymore.
I was ten, watching Mark break something and Dad asking why I had upset him.
I was sixteen, trying to explain that Mark had taken money from my purse and being told not to accuse my brother over a few pounds.
I was twenty-five, bringing news I was proud of and watching it become a discussion about Mark needing help with childcare.
The pattern had never been complicated.
Mark wanted.
Dad softened it for him.
Everyone else adjusted.
I was expected to call that family.
A person can be trained to apologise for taking up space.
But training is not the same as truth.
“The house is not up for discussion,” I said.
Mark’s face hardened.
“You are so selfish.”
Jenna’s hand moved under the table, a small warning he ignored.
“Everything has to be about control with you,” he said. “Mum is gone. Things change.”
“Yes,” I said. “She is gone. Which is why what she put in writing matters more, not less.”
My father’s head snapped up.
“What is that supposed to mean?”
I held his eyes.
“It means the house was never Mark’s to plan around.”
Dad slapped his palm on the table.
The cutlery jumped.
“Enough.”
But enough had never meant enough when Mark was the one speaking.
It meant enough from me.
Mark stood.
His chair scraped so loudly that Jenna flinched.
“No,” he said. “I’m tired of this. Every holiday, every family decision, every single thing somehow has to orbit around her.”
He pointed at me.
“She doesn’t have a husband. She doesn’t have children. She doesn’t need a whole beach house while the rest of us are actually building something.”
“Mark,” Jenna whispered.
He did not look at her.
“Give me one good reason,” he said. “One good reason it should stay with you instead of going to my kids.”
I stood slowly.
My legs were steady, which surprised me.
“Because it was never yours.”
He laughed once, sharp and ugly.
Then he grabbed his mimosa glass.
For half a breath, I thought he was only going to slam it down.
Instead, he hurled it at the stone edge of the fireplace.
The crack split the room.
Glass burst out across the floor.
Orange juice and fizz streaked the hearth and splashed the boards.
A piece skittered close to my shoe and stopped there, catching the light.
My stepmother gasped.
Jenna folded in on herself.
The tulips trembled in the vase.
And my father did what he had always done.
He chose the path that protected Mark and blamed me for the damage.
He rose halfway from his chair, pointed at me with a shaking hand, and shouted, “You’ve always been the problem! If you had any decency at all, you’d stop turning everything into a war!”
The room went silent after that.
Not quiet.
Silent.
There is a difference.
Quiet still lets people breathe.
Silence holds them in place.
The only sound was the slow ticking of liquid dripping from the broken glass onto the hearth.
Mark was breathing hard.
Dad looked furious in the righteous way people look when they have already forgiven themselves.
My stepmother looked almost relieved, as if someone had finally said aloud the thing she had been polite enough to imply for years.
Jenna looked horrified.
I looked at all of them and felt the last thread snap without making a sound.
For years, I had believed that staying calm would eventually make them see me as reasonable.
For years, I had mistaken endurance for peace.
But some families do not mistake your silence for kindness.
They mistake it for permission.
My bag was hanging from the back of my chair.
I reached into it and took out my phone.
Dad’s face changed.
“Who are you calling now?”
I did not answer.
I unlocked the screen.
My hands were not shaking.
That seemed to frighten them more than shouting would have.
Mark wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.
“Oh, brilliant. What now? A dramatic exit? Going to call someone and tell them we were mean to you?”
I tapped the number saved under my solicitor’s name.
The phone rang twice.
When he answered, I turned slightly away from the table, though I made no effort to lower my voice.
“Initiate the transfer,” I said. “It’s time they learned the truth.”
My father laughed, but there was no humour in it.
Mark stared at me.
“What truth?” he said. “That you’re impossible?”
I ended the call and placed the phone beside my plate.
The black screen reflected the dining room ceiling.
For one absurd second, I noticed there was a tiny smear of orange juice on the corner of the tablecloth.
My stepmother folded her arms.
“You’ve made your point.”
“No,” I said. “Not yet.”
Dad’s voice dropped.
“What have you done?”
I looked at him then, really looked.
At the man who had taught me to accept crumbs as affection.
At the man who had let my brother become a storm and then blamed me for the broken windows.
At the man who had heard my mother’s wishes and still thought there might be room to bargain with them.
“Thirty minutes,” I said.
Mark frowned.
“For what?”
I picked up my mug.
The tea was cold.
“For the documents to arrive.”
Jenna’s head lifted.
Dad went still.
Mark looked from me to him, suddenly less certain than he had been a minute before.
The tulips leaned between us, bright and ridiculous in the middle of all that ruin.
The shattered glass was still on the floor.
Nobody moved to clean it.
Nobody asked whether Jenna was all right.
Nobody spoke for my mother again.
I set the mug down and said the rest of it before I could decide to be kinder than they deserved.
“And for both of you to find out what Mum knew before she died.”
Dad’s mouth opened.
Nothing came out.
Mark blinked as if the sentence had struck him somewhere he had not guarded.
Outside, a car passed slowly along the wet road, tyres hissing against the pavement.
Inside, the house seemed to draw one long breath.
Then, from the hallway, came the sound none of us expected yet.
A knock at the front door.