“There are people attempting to enter my home,” I said, my voice strangely calm. “I told them not to come. They refuse to leave.”

“Is anyone inside with you?”

“No. They’re outside.”

“Do they have weapons?”

“No,” I said. “But they have a moving truck, and they’re trying to force entry.”

“We’ll send deputies,” the dispatcher said. “Stay inside. Do not engage.”

I hung up.

Outside, Mom banged so hard on the door that it shook in its frame.

“Mara, open this door! We’re not doing this!”

“You are trespassing,” I called back. “I’m asking you to leave.”

“You are humiliating us in front of strangers!” she yelled.

“You’re humiliating yourselves,” I said quietly.

Minutes passed.

Then sirens.

The sound echoed up the slope, bouncing off the pines, growing louder as two police cruisers climbed the hill. Red and blue lights flashed through the trees, casting fractured colors across the cabin walls.

Lydia swore under her breath. Dad stepped back from the porch. Mom’s eyes widened with something between fear and outrage.

The cruisers stopped. Two deputies got out.

Deputy Hartman approached the porch.

“Good morning,” he said, firm but not unkind. “We received a report of trespassing.”

Mom immediately pointed at me.