After a brutal night shift, I found out my parents had planned a weekend at my lake house with 20 guests, without asking me.

After a brutal night shift, I found out my parents had planned a weekend at my lake house with 20 guests, without asking me.

My parents announced they were bringing 20 guests to my lake house and ordered me to fill the fridge. When I said no, Mom laughed and asked if I really thought I could stop them. By Friday morning, Dad was screaming, “What did you do to the house?”

I had just finished a twelve-hour shift at St. Mercy Medical Center, most of it spent on my feet, most of it spent watching people fight for one more breath beneath fluorescent lights. By the time I pulled up outside my apartment in Portland, Oregon, my scrubs smelled like disinfectant and coffee, and my phone had been buzzing for twenty minutes straight.

Family group chat.

Dad had tagged me three times.

Dad: We’re using your lake house this weekend—20 guests.

Mom: Fill the fridge and behave.

My younger brother, Kyle, added a line of laughing emojis.

I stared at the messages until the letters started to blur.

My lake house was not “family property.” It belonged to me. I bought it after six years of double shifts, overtime, and living with roommates who stole food from my shelves. It was a quiet place near Devils Lake where I could sleep, breathe, and not listen to my mother judge every part of my life.

I typed one word.

Me: No.

Mom answered immediately.

Mom: 😂😂😂 You really think you can stop us?

Dad sent a voice message, but I did not open it. I already knew the voice he would use: an order dressed up as family love.

So I did not argue.

I showered, changed, and made one call to my neighbor, Mrs. Harper, who lived across the gravel road from the lake house.

“Margaret,” I said, “if any cars show up this weekend, they do not have permission to enter.”

She paused. “Your parents again?”

“Yes.”

“Good. I’ll keep an eye out.”

Then I opened my laptop and signed into the smart security system. I changed every door code. I disabled the old garage keypad. I shut off the guest Wi-Fi. I turned on the cameras and called the local locksmith, the same man who had helped me after my father “borrowed” the place the previous summer and left beer cans in the hot tub.

By noon, the locks had been replaced.

By three, I had emailed the sheriff’s office non-emergency line with a written statement: no one had permission to enter the property.

Then I slept.

Friday morning, my phone exploded.

Forty missed calls.

Dad’s name filled the screen over and over.

I answered the forty-first call.

“What did you do to the house?” he screamed.

His voice came through windy and furious. In the background, I heard Mom shouting, “Tell her to stop acting crazy!”

I sat up slowly. “Good morning.”

“Don’t you good morning me! The front door code doesn’t work. The garage is locked. There are cameras everywhere. Your mother is standing outside with groceries melting, and everyone is staring at us!”

“Then everyone should leave.”

“This is a family weekend!”

“No,” I said. “It was a break-in attempt with witnesses.”

For once, silence followed.

Then Dad lowered his voice. “Open the door, Claire.”

I looked at the live camera feed.

Twenty people were standing on my porch.

And behind them, a sheriff’s cruiser was pulling into the driveway.

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