She Charged Rent On My Own Family Home. Then Christmas Exposed Her-mdue - Chainityai

She Charged Rent On My Own Family Home. Then Christmas Exposed Her-mdue

I lent my cousin my parents’ house, and three years later his wife tried to charge me $1,000 a week to sleep there.

I paid her for the full week.

I smiled on text.

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I even messaged her, “Thanks, cousin.”

Then I opened the property deed folder, called my lawyer, and planned a Christmas that Chloe would never forget.

Because it is one thing to be a good family member.

It is another thing entirely to let someone steal the house where your memories are buried.

The text came in while my office still smelled like burnt coffee and warm printer toner.

It was one of those tired Dallas afternoons where the air conditioner rattled above my desk and every spreadsheet looked like it had been designed to punish me personally.

My phone buzzed beside a framed photo of my parents.

I glanced down, expecting a utility notice or another client email.

Instead, I saw Chloe’s name.

“The small guest room is the one you’ll be using.”

For a second, my brain refused to arrange those words into meaning.

The small guest room.

In my own house.

My name is Myra Santos.

I am thirty-four years old, an accountant in Dallas, and for a long time I believed lending a house to family was love with a key attached.

I found out love gets expensive when the wrong people start calling it theirs.

My parents died in a car crash on the highway to San Antonio when I was still young enough to believe grief had a bottom.

It does not.

It just changes rooms.

Some days it is in your chest.

Some days it is in a song at the grocery store.

Some days it is in a house with pale yellow walls, a tiled kitchen, a patio full of bougainvillea, and a living room where your mother once laughed so hard she had to grip the counter.

That house was in Austin.

It was not fancy.

It was not new.

The tile in the kitchen had one cracked corner near the back door.

The hallway closet stuck in July.

The guest bathroom faucet whined if you turned it too fast.

But it was where my father taught me to check the oil in my first car.

It was where I learned to ride a bike in the driveway and crashed into the mailbox hard enough to dent it.

It was where my mother held me after I lost my first job and said, “A house can’t save you from life, sweetie, but it waits for you when you come back broken.”

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