My nephew’s car came up the gravel drive just after sunset, headlights sweeping across the water like searchlights. A second car followed close behind, tires crunching over the stones I’d spread myself last week. From my leather armchair, I could see the reflection of both vehicles in the big front window, the glass catching the flicker of their turn signals and the orange pulse of my wood stove behind me.
The cottage smelled like coffee, split pine, and old books. On the stainless-steel fridge, the tiny American flag magnet my wife had bought at a Fourth of July parade years ago held up a grocery list, its red and white stripes catching a bit of light from the stove. On the security monitor beside my chair, the motion alert popped up: DRIVEWAY CAMERA.
A moment later, another alert: DECK CAMERA. Marcus got out of the driver’s seat in a slate-gray jacket he hoped looked like money. A young couple climbed from the second car, dragging rolling suitcases up the path like they were walking into a resort.
My nephew gestured toward my lake house with a salesman’s sweep of his arm, talking fast, confident, already rehearsing the lie he’d used to take their money. He thought he was checking guests into “his” lakeside Airbnb. He didn’t know I’d been waiting three weeks for this exact moment, or that his “dream investment property” now had a lawyer, three cameras, and a sheriff’s deputy on speed dial.
Out on the water, a great blue heron stood in the shallows, perfectly still, watching the shoreline with the same patience I’d been teaching myself. Tonight, the cottage wasn’t just my home. It was the surprise I’d built from every boundary I’d never set before.
Three months earlier, the cottage had existed only as a dream on paper. The real estate agent’s pen made a soft, deliberate scratch as she signed the last page and slid it across the oak desk toward me. Her office sat on the third floor of an old brick building in downtown Seattle, the kind with frosted glass doors and a flag folded neatly in a stand by the window.
Outside, October rain streaked down the panes in steady lines, turning brake lights into blurred red smears. “Congratulations, Mr. Cartwright,” she said.
“You picked a beautiful spot. Clearwater Lake is gorgeous all year.”
Her name was Jennifer Morales, mid-forties, sharp suit, sneakers under the desk. There was a half-finished iced tea sweating beside her keyboard and a framed photo of her kids at a Little League game, another tiny American flag fluttering in the background over the field.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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