Geneva’s eyes lit up like Christmas. “Do it.”
We did.
By Thursday, Hayes Beach Rentals was real. Permits. Insurance. House rules. A property manager contract—Geneva, because she lived close and had the gift of reading people fast. Professional photos. A listing. Within forty-eight hours we got our first booking: two weeks, $9,000.
When Sarah disputed the catering charge, the total came back: $5,200. The number sat on the page like a bruise.
“That’s your key number,” Geneva said. “That’s the receipt for what he tried.”
By the following week, we had bookings through September. By the next month, inquiries for next summer.
My sanctuary hadn’t been stolen. It had been transformed—by me, on purpose.
And when you can turn an attempted takeover into a revenue stream with house rules, you realize you were never powerless. That was the sixth hinge.
Terry called again after Pastor Williams finally heard the full story. The first time I answered, Terry sounded tired—less like a general, more like a man who realized his plan had consequences.
“Mama,” he said, “can we talk?”
“We can talk,” I told him. “But you don’t get to threaten me.”
He tried to apologize sideways—“I was scared,” “we’re in debt,” “Briana kept saying you owed us”—and I listened without yelling because I needed to hear who he was choosing to be.
“You could’ve asked me,” I said. “Honestly. We could’ve discussed a loan. Business advice. A plan. But you chose manipulation. You used church. You used guilt. You tried to make me look unstable to take my home.”
Silence on his end, then a small, broken, “I know.”
Three weeks later, he showed up alone. No Briana, no Joyce, no entourage.
“Five minutes,” he asked, standing at the edge of my driveway like he wasn’t sure he had the right to be there.
We sat on my deck. The ocean was steady, indifferent.
“I’m sorry,” he said, and this time it sounded like the real thing. “I convinced myself I was helping you when I was really trying to save myself.”
“Why didn’t you come to me?” I asked.
He swallowed. “Because I’m supposed to be successful. I’m Alyssa Moore’s son. You built an empire. I can barely keep a business afloat. I felt like I was failing you.”
I let the truth sit between us. “So you tried to take from me instead of learning from me.”
He nodded, eyes wet.
“Briana filed for divorce,” he added quietly. “I think she wanted your life more than she wanted me.”
I didn’t smile. I didn’t celebrate. I just breathed.
“I forgive you,” I told him, and my voice shook because forgiveness is not the same as trust. “But I can’t give you access right now. If we rebuild, we rebuild with boundaries.”
He looked wounded. “How long?”