It had been one of those long, bone-tiring days where the city felt like a machine chewing me up and spitting me out on the other side. My laptop was still open on the kitchen counter, an unfinished email glaring at me accusingly. I was standing by the window with the phone pressed to my ear, watching the jagged outline of skyscrapers carve into a sky painted in streaks of orange and pink.

And in the middle of that quiet, the voice I least wanted to hear said, with almost gleeful venom,

“You’re banned from the family beach house forever.”

Victoria’s words snapped through the speaker like a whip, sharp and crackling, as if even the cell service couldn’t quite stand her.
My grip tightened around my phone. “What?”

“I’ve changed all the locks,” she continued, savoring each word. I pictured her perfectly manicured nails tapping against a marble countertop as she spoke. “Don’t even think about trying to get in. This is what you deserve for ruining Lily’s graduation party.”

I stared at my own reflection in the glass—dark hair pulled into a sloppy bun, an oversized sweater hanging off one shoulder, eyes ringed with the faint shadows of too many late nights and too little sleep. Somewhere far below, a car horn blared. Above, a plane traced a line through the sky.

“The party,” I said slowly, because I genuinely wanted to see how far she’d go with this, “you specifically didn’t invite me to?”

She scoffed. “Oh, please.”

“The one where you told everyone I was too busy to attend my own stepsister’s celebration?” My tone stayed calm, flat, years of practice smoothing out the jagged edges of my emotions. It was a trick I’d learned early in life: never show Victoria you’d been hurt. She fed on that.

Victoria laughed, a brittle sound I could practically feel scraping across my skin. “Don’t play the victim, Alexandra. Everyone knows you’re jealous of Lily’s success. And now you’ll never set foot in that beach house again. I’ve made sure of it.”

Jealous. That word again. It had been her favorite label for me since the day she married my father—and not because it was true, but because it was convenient.

Behind my reflection in the window, I could almost see another image layered faintly over the glass: a wraparound porch, white railing peeling just a little at the corners, an old rocking chair, and the glittering expanse of the Atlantic beyond. The beach house.