I was left standing outside in the rain just three hours before the hurricane struck, all because I had “talked back to him at dinner.” From the yard, I watched through the window as my parents sealed the door shut. Then a black limousine arrived. My billionaire grandmother stepped out, looked at me, then at the house, and said: “Demolish.”Three hours before Hurricane Maren reached land, my stepfather forced me out barefoot into the rain.The sirens had already howled across Maple Ridge twice. The sky had turned a sickly green-gray, the kind that makes animals hide and grown men pretend they aren’t afraid. Through the front window, I watched Roy press silver duct tape across the glass while my mother handed him strips. Neither of them looked at me.All I had done was ask one question at dinner.
“Where did my father’s life insurance money go?”Roy stopped chewing. My mother froze with her fork halfway to her mouth. Behind them, the television showed a spinning red storm cone devouring the coastline.“That money kept this roof over your head,” Roy said evenly.“It was left to me.”He stood so fast his chair scraped loudly across the floor. “Get out.”My mother whispered, “Roy, please.”He pointed at the front door. “When she remembers respect, she can come back in.”I looked at my mother, waiting for her to choose me. She lowered her gaze to her plate.That was how I ended up standing in the yard as the hurricane drew closer.I was twenty-eight years old, but in that moment I felt twelve again—the year Roy first moved into our house with his toolbox and quiet voice. He never hit me. That was why people defended him. He smiled at neighbors, fixed lawn mowers, carried groceries for elderly women. Inside our home, he erased my father one piece at a time.