I sat down on the floor, crossed my legs, and closed my eyes.

This is mine.

The cabin creaked softly as the wind pressed against its walls, a familiar grounding sound. The smell of pine sap drifted in through the cracked window frame.

For a moment, it was just me and the mountains and the heartbeat of a place I had chosen for myself.

Then a loud scrape jolted me upright—someone trying the back door.

My pulse spiked. I ran to the hallway and heard Lydia’s voice faintly on the other side of the house.

“She locked it. Check the garage.”

I swallowed a surge of panic and whispered into the empty air, “It’s okay. They’re not getting in.”

Still, I moved from window to window, ensuring every latch was tight.

Outside, they regrouped. Mom yelled something unintelligible. Dad argued with her. The movers stood around awkwardly, unsure whether to keep hauling or get in their truck and leave.

The tension thickened into something nearly tangible, like the moment before a thunderstorm splits open the sky.

I returned to the door and pressed my back against it. Their shadows moved beneath the gap at the bottom—restless, impatient, entitled.

“Mara,” Mom called, her voice suddenly sweet, syrupy in a way that made my skin crawl. “Honey, open the door. We can talk.”

I didn’t move.

“Don’t be unreasonable,” she continued. “We’ll get along just fine once everything’s settled.”

I closed my eyes.

Then, clear as if whispered directly into my ear, I heard Lydia say the words that locked everything into place.

“You don’t get to call cops on your own family.”

My eyes opened slowly.

I wasn’t sure if they were daring me or warning me.

Either way, the decision was already made.

I wasn’t letting them inside.

Not now.

Not ever.

I stepped away from the door, gripping my phone.

“If I have to fight,” I whispered into the quiet, “then I will.”

And for the first time, I truly meant it.

The morning the locksmith was scheduled to arrive, the mountain was wrapped in a pale, silvery fog that muffled every sound. It made the cabin feel suspended in a quiet pocket of air, like the world was holding its breath with me.

I hadn’t slept. Not really. I’d closed my eyes, but my mind replayed every moment from the day before—my mother’s commands, my father’s disappointment, Lydia’s entitlement, their boxes crossing my threshold, their voices claiming what wasn’t theirs.