At six o’clock one morning, my unemployed sister showed up at the apartment I rented from our parents and announced: “I’m moving in.”
A few minutes later, my mother added another surprise.
“We’re doubling your rent to cover the extra expenses.”
When I told them I would move out instead, they laughed as if I were bluffing.
They stopped laughing when I took every single thing I had paid for.
My name is Alice. I’m twenty-eight years old, and for as long as I can remember, I’ve been the “reliable one” in my family.
That might sound like a compliment, but it never felt like one.
Being reliable meant working hard, staying quiet, solving problems, paying my own way, and cleaning up everyone else’s messes without complaint.
My younger sister, Chloe, had a very different role.
According to my mother, Chloe was “special.”
Special meant she could quit jobs whenever she felt bored or misunderstood. It meant she could be careless, irresponsible, and dramatic, yet still be protected from consequences. Whenever Chloe failed, someone else was blamed. Whenever I succeeded, I was told not to get a big head.
For six years, I lived in the small apartment above my parents’ garage.
My father called it a “family discount,” but I still paid nine hundred dollars in rent every month. I bought my own groceries, paid my own bills, handled repairs, and furnished the entire place with money I earned working long shifts at Apex Distribution Center.
The apartment wasn’t large, but it was home.
Or at least I thought it was.
I bought the navy-blue sofa in the living room, the oak bed frame in the bedroom, the kitchen table, the rugs, the dishes, the towels, and even the refrigerator after the old one broke and my father refused to replace it.
My parents provided the space.
Everything else came from me.
Chloe never respected that.
She walked in whenever she wanted, borrowed things without asking, used my internet, left empty cups behind, and treated my apartment like an extension of her own bedroom.

Then everything changed during my mother’s birthday dinner.
As usual, I was cleaning up after dessert while everyone else relaxed. That was when my mother casually announced that Chloe needed a “fresh start” and would be moving into my apartment.
I stared at her.
“My apartment?”
She smiled as though the decision had already been made.
“Of course. You’re disciplined. You’ll be good for her.”
Across the table, Chloe smirked over her wine glass.
“Relax, Alice. We’re family.”
A moment later, my father joined the conversation.
“Don’t act territorial,” he said. “Our names are on the deed. You’re just a tenant.”
I didn’t argue.
But something inside me went cold.
That night, I returned home and immediately knew something was wrong.
The door was unlocked.
Chloe’s perfume hung in the air.
A duffel bag lay open on my rug, and Chloe was stretched across my bed with her shoes still on, scrolling through her phone.
“What are you doing?” I asked.
“Moving in,” she replied without looking up. “Mom approved it.”
“It’s not your apartment.”
She rolled her eyes.
“Stop being so controlling. I just need some peace.”
Peace.
In my home.
I called my parents, hoping they would listen to reason.
Instead, they took Chloe’s side immediately.
My father reminded me that he owned the property. My mother insisted Chloe was going through a difficult time and needed stability.
Over the next few weeks, the life I had built began to disappear.
My bathroom counter vanished beneath Chloe’s makeup. Damp towels covered the floor. Dirty dishes piled up on the kitchen table. Late-night videos and music blasted through the apartment while I struggled to sleep before early shifts.
One evening, I came home exhausted and found Chloe wearing my favorite wool hoodie.
“Take it off,” I said.
She laughed.
“It’s just a hoodie.”
When she finally tossed it onto the floor, I noticed a smear of lip gloss across the front.
I picked it up, walked away, and tried to stay calm.
A few minutes later, my father called.
His timing couldn’t have been worse.
“We’re increasing your rent,” he said. “Starting next month, it’ll be eighteen hundred dollars.”
I thought I had misheard him.
“That’s double.”
“It’ll help cover utilities and Chloe’s expenses while she gets back on her feet.”
My mother grabbed the phone and accused me of being selfish.
From the living room, Chloe shouted that I was simply afraid of change.
That was the moment something finally snapped.
“I’m not paying it,” I said. “If those are the terms, I’m moving out.”
My mother laughed.
My father threatened me.
Chloe mocked me.
None of them believed I would actually leave.

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