She Charged Myra Rent For Her Own Family Home. Then The Deed Came Out-nga9999 - Chainityai

She Charged Myra Rent For Her Own Family Home. Then The Deed Came Out-nga9999

The first time Myra Santos saw the text, she thought her eyes had skipped a line.

She was sitting in her Dallas office with a paper cup of coffee gone cold beside her keyboard and her parents’ photo facing her from the corner of the desk.

Chloe’s message was neat, cheerful, and impossibly insulting.

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

Myra read it again, slower this time, as if the words might become less ridiculous if she gave them a chance.

They did not.

The small guest room.

In her own house.

The house in Austin had been her parents’ house before it became hers.

It had pale yellow walls, a tiled kitchen, a porch that caught the evening light, and a back patio where bougainvillea kept blooming even after everyone who planted it was gone.

After her parents died on the highway to San Antonio, Myra could not bring herself to sell it.

She lived and worked in Dallas, but she still paid the taxes, utilities, insurance, lawn care, and repairs.

Every bill felt like a hand on the shoulder of the past.

It was not a mansion.

It was not an investment she bragged about.

It was the place where her mother had kept coffee warming too long on the stove, and where her father had taught her to patch a window screen with more patience than skill.

When Aunt Rose called years earlier, crying because Paul’s wedding was in trouble, Myra had listened.

Paul was her cousin, but they had grown up close enough that family labels felt too small.

Chloe’s family, Aunt Rose explained, expected the groom to have a house before the wedding.

Paul did not have one.

Myra did.

The choice had felt simple at the time.

“You two can stay there for a while,” she told Paul. “Just take care of it.”

Paul had cried on the phone.

He said Myra was like a sister to him.

He said he would never forget it.

Chloe was sweet then, soft-voiced and grateful, thanking “Cousin Myra” as if the kindness had humbled her.

Myra handed them the keys under the porch light and drove back to Dallas believing she had saved a wedding.

The first warning came quietly.

A year later, she drove to Austin with a grocery bag of household things and tried her key in the front door.

It would not turn.

Chloe opened the door in a robe, smiling with her mouth but not her eyes.

She said the old deadbolt had been replaced because it was unsafe.

Myra almost argued.

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