“Lauren Elizabeth,” she said, using my middle name like a weapon, “what is this I hear about you refusing to help your sister? You know she’s going through a difficult time.”
“Mom,” I said, gripping the back of a chair, “I didn’t know she was coming. No one told me. She just showed up.”
“We didn’t think we needed to,” my mother said, as if the decision was obvious. “It’s a family apartment, and your sister needs a place to stay. You have two bedrooms. You live alone. It makes sense.”
“It doesn’t make sense for my life,” I said. “I have a lease. I have a home office. I need privacy.”
“Privacy?” The word came out of her mouth like it offended her. “Lauren, you’re being selfish.”
My throat tightened. I could hear my father in the background, his voice muffled, asking what was going on. My mother’s response was quick and clipped, telling him in a way that painted me as the problem.
“Family helps family,” my mother continued, her tone building. “Your sister lost her job and her apartment. Where is she supposed to go?”
I could feel Vanessa watching me. I could picture her face, the way she enjoyed the performance. She didn’t need to argue. My mother would do it for her.
“That isn’t my responsibility,” I said, and the moment the words left my mouth I knew they would be used against me. They sounded harsh even to my own ears.
My mother inhaled sharply, like I’d slapped her. “Not your responsibility? I cannot believe what I’m hearing. After everything we’ve done for you, giving you that apartment at such a reduced rate…”
“I pay rent,” I said, unable to stop myself. “Every month. On time.”
“Yes,” she snapped. “Well below market value. And this is how you repay us? By turning your back on your sister?”
My father’s voice came closer to the phone. “Lauren,” he said, calm in the way he always was, like his calm was meant to be the reasonable counterbalance to my mother’s intensity. “Be reasonable. It’ll just be for a little while. Until Vanessa gets back on her feet.”
A little while. The phrase floated into the room like a poison fog.
In my family, a little while meant as long as Vanessa wanted. A little while meant she would settle in and let time stretch around her like a blanket.
“What if I say no?” I asked, and my voice trembled in a way I hated.
There was a pause. A silence heavy with the sense that something was being measured.
Then my mother spoke, her tone turning cool, deliberate. “Then we may need to reconsider our rental arrangement. If you’re going to be difficult, perhaps we should charge you full market rate.”
It was said so casually, like she was offering a logical consequence.
But it was a threat. It was leverage. It was the reminder that my home was not entirely mine, because the people who owned the building also owned my childhood, my family ties, my sense of obligation.
I looked at Vanessa. She had dropped the tearful act. Her eyes were bright with victory.
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