The only thing my mother left me that felt truly alive was a small lake house she bought before meeting my father. It was her refuge, a place of peace where she painted the shoreline while I skipped stones, or read to me on rainy afternoons. A pillow she made for the window seat read, Still waters, strong heart—her quiet mantra.
When I was fifteen, we spent a week there filled with simple joys: pancake breakfasts, marshmallows by the fire, and soft confessions. “This house saved me,” she told me then. She passed away the following year. Since then, I returned every June, on the anniversary of her death, keeping the house just as she left it.
After her passing, my father remarried quickly. His new wife, Carla, had a polished smile but often made subtle remarks mocking my mother’s art and her “free-spirited” lifestyle. When I legally inherited the house at twenty-one, I made it clear to my father: no one entered without me. He agreed.
But this year, I arrived to find Carla hosting a loud gathering at the house. Her guests laughed at the decor and made light of my mother’s memory. When I confronted her, she casually claimed she had borrowed a key and insisted my mother wouldn’t want me to “cling to the past.”
Fortunately, I had installed security cameras. With clear video, audio, and even text messages mocking the home, I worked with a lawyer to build a case. In the end, Carla faced legal consequences and was barred from the property. Not long after, she and my father separated.
Now the house is mine again. The window seat is still, the pillow returned. As I make pancakes and watch the lake glow at sunset, I whisper, “I love you,” and somehow, I feel her answer.