I lent my parents’ house to my cousin for three years… but when I returned for Christmas, his wife tried to charge me 60$ just to sleep in my own home. I never imagined that the day would come when my own kindness would nearly make me lose everything my parents left me.

10

I lent my parents’ house to my cousin for three years… but when I returned for Christmas, his wife tried to charge me 60$ just to sleep in my own home. I never imagined that the day would come when my own kindness would nearly make me lose everything my parents left me.

Part 1 — The Only Thing They Left Me

Three years ago, my parents died in a highway crash in Jalisco. In the aftermath, everything blurred—except one thing: the old family house.

Not a mansion. Not flashy. But it was ours.

I lived in Guadalajara, working as an accountant, so the house sat empty—until my aunt called, sobbing.

My cousin Paolo was about to marry, but the bride’s family demanded proof he “owned a home.”

So I did what I always do when family asks. I caved.
“Paolo… you can stay in my parents’ house.”

He thanked me like I’d saved his life. His fiancée, Jenny, smiled sweetly.

Back then, it looked like gratitude.

It wasn’t. It was a claim being planted.

Part 2 — The Locks Changed, and So Did the Tone

A year later, I showed up unannounced in the village. My key didn’t work.

Jenny opened the door like nothing happened.
“Oh, Mira!

We changed the locks. The old one was broken. It’s safer now.”

Safer for who?
Because suddenly, I wasn’t walking into my home.

I was requesting access.

I swallowed it for peace. That was my mistake.

Another year passed. Then the whispers started: neighbors saying Jenny told people they’d bought the house.

I tried to believe it was just her ego.

Until she said it to my face in the only language she respected: money.

What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
TAP ” READ MORE ” 👇