Her father stood by the entrance with arms crossed. Her mother sat on a bench, looking smaller than Nora had ever seen her.
For a brief moment, instinct surged: fix it, smooth things over, take them in.
Then she remembered the kitchen. The assumptions. The entitlement. The years.
“You followed me?” she asked.
“We’re your parents,” Ronald said, as if that explained everything.
“It doesn’t answer that.”
Denise stood slowly. “Nora, please. This place? You can’t stay here long. Let’s calm down and go back to your house.”
“It’s not my house anymore.”
Her father frowned. “What do you mean?”
“I terminated the lease.”
Silence.
Real silence.
“You what?”
“I ended it. There’s no house to go back to.”
Her mother’s face lost color. “You gave up a three-bedroom house for this?”
Nora glanced at the brick building behind her, then back at them.
“I gave up being available for exploitation.”
Her father muttered a curse. “You’ve lost your mind.”
“No,” Nora said. “I’ve finally used it.”