“Get out,” my brother-in-law said.
My father, Robert Hayes, stood frozen in the doorway of the seaside home I had bought for my parents’ fortieth anniversary. One hand still held the brass doorknob, the other clutched a small grocery bag. Behind him, gray waves crashed against the rocky Monterey shoreline. It should have been a calm, peaceful morning.
Instead, my mother was crying so hard she could barely stand.
“This isn’t your house,” Daniel Mercer repeated, louder this time, as if my father couldn’t hear. “You can’t just walk in whenever you want.”
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