The morning the Proctors arrived with their U-Haul, they expected to move into their new beach home.
Instead, they found me standing outside with Margaret, legal documents, and proof that I was still the only rightful owner.
A sheriff informed them they had no legal permission to occupy the property.
Derek’s face changed when he learned the deed he relied on was never recorded.
The house, the land, and everything inside it still belonged to me.
The truth became even worse when Margaret revealed Derek had claimed ownership of the villa during a financial application.
His mistake was no longer just a family disagreement.
It had become a legal problem.
The Proctors packed their belongings and left the home they thought they owned.
Derek apologized, but I could tell he was afraid of consequences more than sorry for hurting me.
I changed the locks, restored my home, and rewrote my estate plans.
The villa that my son tried to give away will one day help women rebuilding their lives.
I did not lose my son that day.
I lost the belief that love means allowing people to take everything you built.
The porch swing Arthur and I dreamed about still hangs outside.
It does not creak.
Because some things built with love are strong enough to survive anything.