“Tell me that you broke into my house and threw a party?”
She sighed like I was the inconvenience. “Don’t be dramatic. I used the spare key Mom has. Your place is bigger than mine, and this is a huge night for me.”
“My house is not available,” I said, already grabbing my laptop bag from the hotel chair as if I could somehow run all the way back to Texas.
Madison laughed again, brighter and harsher this time. “This night isn’t about you. I’m not stopping for anyone.”
In the background, someone shouted, “Speech! Speech!”
I glanced back at the camera feed and saw a man leaning against the antique cabinet my late husband had restored by hand, while another guest carried a red drink through my living room where the white rug sat beneath the coffee table.
“Shut it down now,” I said.
“No.”
That single word settled something inside me.
For years, Madison had taken from me—my clothes, my money, my patience, even my name—and every time I objected, my mother would say that successful people needed support while “sensitive people needed perspective.”
So I stopped arguing.
I made one quiet call.
Not to my mother.
Not to Madison’s husband.
But to Graham Patel, the off-duty Austin police sergeant who lived next door, had my emergency contact, and knew I was out of town.
“Graham,” I said, watching Madison climb onto a chair to give her toast, “there are trespassers in my house.”
Then I muted my phone and started watching.
On the security feed, Madison raised her champagne glass while nearly a hundred people gathered under my string lights, and from the way she smiled, you’d think she had rented a ballroom instead of taking over her sister’s home.