I bought the beach house with my husband’s inheritance, thinking I would finally have some peace. Then the phone rang. “Mom, this summer we’re all coming… but you can stay in the back bedroom,” my son said. I smiled and replied, “Of course, I’ll be waiting for you.” When they opened the door and saw what I had done to the house… I knew no one would ever look at me the same way again.
I bought the beach house in Cádiz six months after my husband, Javier, died from a sudden heart attack. It wasn’t an impulsive decision; I sold the large apartment I no longer needed and used part of his inheritance to start over somewhere quieter. We had always dreamed of waking up to the sound of the sea, but in the end, it was me alone who walked through that white door that smelled of salt and damp wood.
For weeks I cleaned, painted, and fixed small things: a jammed shutter, a loose railing, a garden overrun with weeds. My back ached every night, but I also felt something close to peace. No one told me what to do, no one invaded my space. For the first time in forty years, silence didn’t frighten me.
Until the phone rang.
“Mom, it’s great that you’re all settled in,” my son Álvaro said, in that rushed tone he uses when he’s already made a decision. “Listen, we’ve been thinking that this summer we’ll all go to the house. Laura, the kids… and her parents too. Since it’s big, it makes sense.”
I stayed quiet for a few seconds, looking out at the sea through the window.
“Of course…” I finally replied.
“Great. Oh, and so we’re more comfortable, you can use the small bedroom at the back. The master suite is better for us with the kids, you know.”
“You know.” As if it were the most logical thing in the world.
I swallowed and smiled, even though he couldn’t see me.
“Yes, my son. Don’t worry. I’ll take care of preparing everything.”
I hung up and stood motionless in the middle of the living room. I looked at the freshly painted walls, the curtains I had sewn myself, the master bedroom where I had finally slept without crying. Something inside me hardened, like plaster once it dries and can no longer be reshaped.
I worked nonstop for three weeks before they arrived. I moved furniture, emptied closets, took apart things I had put together with hope. When they finally parked in front of the house and got out laughing, I was already sitting on the porch, waiting for them.
“Mom!” Álvaro shouted, carrying suitcases. “We can’t wait to see the house!”
I opened the door and let them go in first.
It took less than ten seconds for them to stop smiling.
They came in all talking at once, the children running down the hallway and Laura scanning the space with that silent, evaluative expression that had always made me uncomfortable. But when they turned left—where the large living room with ocean views used to be—they froze.
The wall separating the living room from the master bedroom was gone. So was the suite. In its place was an open space with six single beds perfectly aligned, identical nightstands, and reading lamps fixed to the wall. Everything white, functional, with no trace of personal decoration.
“What is this?” Laura asked, frowning.
“The bedrooms,” I replied calmly. “I thought that since so many of you were coming, it would be best to organize the space practically. That way, everyone has a bed.”
Álvaro looked at me, confused.
“But… where’s your room?”
I pointed toward the end of the hallway.
“There. The small one.”
The same one he had assigned to me over the phone.
We walked down to it. There was a simple bed, an old dresser, and a small window facing the inner patio. Exactly as he had described.
“Mom, you didn’t have to—” he started.
I interrupted him gently.
“Of course I did. You said what mattered was that you all were comfortable. I can adapt anywhere.”
No one answered. Laura’s parents exchanged an awkward glance. The children, unaware of the tension, asked where they could leave their backpacks.
We went back to the main space. Where my favorite sofa used to be, there was now a large folding table with stackable chairs.
“And the living room?” Laura asked.
“This is the common area,” I explained. “I thought that with so many people, the house would need to function almost like a family hostel. More practical, fewer indulgences.”
Álvaro ran a hand through his hair.
“Mom, we thought… that it would be like a normal vacation house.”
I looked him in the eyes for the first time since they arrived.
“I thought it would be my home.”
The silence grew heavy. Outside, the sea could be heard, and in the distance, the laughter of other vacationers. Inside, no one knew where to sit without feeling out of place.
