Then my mother said, “We’re doubling your rent to cover the extra costs.”
When I told them I would move out instead, they laughed like I was bluffing.
So I took every single thing I had paid for.
My name is Alice. I’m twenty-eight, and in my family, I have always been “the reliable one.” That sounds like praise, but it never was. It meant I was expected to work hard, stay quiet, fix problems, pay my way, and absorb whatever mess everyone else created.
My younger sister, Chloe, was different.
She was “special,” according to my mother. Special meant she could quit jobs whenever she felt misunderstood. Special meant she could be careless, lazy, dramatic, and still be protected.
If Chloe failed, someone else was blamed. If I succeeded, I was told not to be proud.
For six years, I lived in the small apartment above my parents’ garage. My father called it a “family rate,” but I still paid nine hundred dollars every month.
I bought my own groceries, handled my own bills, repaired the place when things broke, and furnished every corner with money I earned from long shifts at Apex Distribution Center.
That apartment was small, but it was mine.
At least, I believed it was.
I had bought the navy sofa, the oak bed frame, the kitchen table, the rugs, the towels, the dishes, even the refrigerator after the old one died and my father refused to replace it. My parents had provided only the key.
Chloe, however, never respected that boundary. She wandered in whenever she wanted, left drinks on my table, used my internet, borrowed my things, and treated my home like an extension of her own room.
Then one Sunday, during my mother’s birthday dinner, everything changed.
After dessert, while I was cleaning up like always, my mother casually said Chloe needed a “fresh start” and would be staying upstairs with me.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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