Chloe. My younger sister. The golden child who had never been allowed to fail properly because my parents always rescued her. Slowly, the truth came out. They had sold their paid-off home for $620,000, used the money to clear Chloe’s debts, and given her the rest so she could “start over.” Since I had a large house, they had decided they would take my downstairs suite.
“You decided this without asking me?”
“We are your parents!” Arthur shouted. “Family helps family. Now get out of the way.”
Then he put both hands on my chest and tried to shove me aside. Something inside me finally broke. I pushed him back. He stumbled against the railing and stared at me in disbelief.
“No,” I said. “Not one box comes into my house.”
Martha screamed. Arthur lunged forward again. I slammed the door, locked the deadbolt, and secured the chain. He hit the door with his shoulder, then kicked it repeatedly, yelling my name. My hands shook, but not from weakness. I had finally said no. I knew that if I let them inside even for a few nights, they could try to claim residency, and my sanctuary would become a legal nightmare.
I opened the security cameras. Arthur paced outside like a furious animal while Martha sobbed on my porch chair. Then my phone began buzzing with messages from relatives. Aunt Diane had already seen my mother’s Facebook post: a tearful selfie from the Buick, claiming her own son had locked his elderly parents outside after they sacrificed everything for family. No mention of Chloe. No mention that they had arrived uninvited. No mention that they had sold their house without asking me.
Part 2
On the camera feed, Arthur circled the house with a flashlight, testing windows. When he found nothing unlocked, he reached the utility box and pulled the main breaker. The house went black for five seconds. Then the backup batteries engaged, and the lights returned warm and steady. Arthur stared at the glowing windows, stunned. He had forgotten I designed the place to survive storms.