My Parents Doubled My Rent So My Unemployed Sister Could Move In, So I Moved Out and Took Everything

Ezoic
“Surprise,” she said brightly. “I’ll be living here now.”

For a second I didn’t respond. My brain stalled on the sentence, trying to make it sensible. Living here. Now. Like it was a fun update. Like she’d brought a houseplant and a bottle of wine instead of three suitcases and a declaration.

“Vanessa,” I managed, voice rough with sleep. “What are you doing here?”

She shrugged, already shifting her grip on one suitcase handle. “Moving in.”

And then she moved.

She didn’t wait for an invitation, didn’t pause to see if I’d step aside willingly. She brushed past me, shoulder grazing mine, and dragged the first suitcase over my threshold. The wheels clacked against the wood floor I’d cleaned the night before, leaving faint scuff marks like a signature.

I stood there in the doorway, holding the edge of it, my body still half in sleep and half in disbelief. The air from the hallway was colder than my apartment. It smelled faintly like someone’s laundry detergent, not mine.

Ezoic
My name is Lauren. I’m twenty-nine years old. And up until that moment, I believed I’d built something stable.

Not perfect, but stable.

I worked as a marketing specialist at a digital agency where the pace was relentless and the expectations were always a few inches above what felt human. I paid my bills on time. I packed lunches to avoid spending money I didn’t have. I tracked my student loan payments the way some people tracked calories. I wasn’t winning at life in some glamorous way, but I was moving forward.

For two years, I’d lived in this apartment, an investment property owned by my parents, renting it at about thirty percent below market rate. When I signed the lease, it felt like a lifeline. A family discount. A chance to breathe.

I should have understood then that in my family, nothing came without conditions.

But I had wanted to believe I could have something simple. A home that was mine. A landlord-tenant relationship that didn’t bleed into my personal life.

Ezoic
I shut the door slowly, as if closing it might reverse what had just happened. Vanessa’s suitcases stood in my living room like three sentries. She had already moved toward the sofa with a satisfied, casual stride, as if she were inspecting a hotel suite.

“Why didn’t you call me?” I asked, still trying to keep my voice level. “It’s eight in the morning.”

She dropped onto my gray sectional with a dramatic exhale, like she’d endured some ordeal getting here. She stretched her legs out, letting her heels bump against my coffee table. My coffee table. The one I’d refinished myself, sanding it down late at night in my tiny kitchen, staining it in careful strokes.

“Because,” she said, drawing the word out, “I knew you’d make it a whole thing.”

“It is a whole thing,” I said. My pulse thudded in my neck. “You can’t just show up and decide you live here.”

Ezoic
Vanessa tilted her head, eyes narrowing slightly like I’d said something amusing. “Why not? Mom and Dad own the place. It’s basically family property.”

That phrase hit something in me, sharp as a pin. Basically family property. As if the work I put into paying rent, paying utilities, maintaining the place, didn’t count.

“I rent it,” I said, slowly, letting each word land. “I have a lease. I pay for it.”

She rolled her eyes with a sound that was almost a laugh. “Yeah, at a massive discount. Must be nice.”

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