The Freeloader In My Guest Room Finally Met The Notice Papers-eirian

I thought the worst part would be telling him he was a guest.

I was wrong.

The worst part was realizing he already knew.

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He knew the apartment was mine before Evan moved in.

He knew my name was on the utilities, the insurance, the internet, the account that got charged when the bill came due.

He knew he had been offered one month, one room, one act of grace.

And somehow, by the time I stood in the hallway with the notice papers in my hand, he had decided my kindness was a door he could wedge open with his foot.

Tyler opened the bedroom door only six inches.

Behind him, I could see the room that was supposed to be Evan’s closet and our occasional guest room.

It looked like a donation center had exploded.

Boxes leaned against the wall.

Plastic bins were stacked near the bed.

A lamp without a shade sat on the floor, plugged into an outlet behind a pile of clothes.

There were grocery bags in there, too, which somehow made me angrier than the boxes.

I had given him one fridge shelf, one freezer shelf, and one cabinet.

He had acted like I was starving him.

Then he had carried more food into the room he did not pay for and called that survival.

Evan stood beside me, but not in the weak middle anymore.

He was in front of me by half a step.

It mattered.

Not enough to erase the weeks when I felt alone in my own apartment, but enough to show me he finally understood the size of the problem he had brought through my front door.

I held the papers out.

“This is your written notice,” I said.

Tyler looked at the pages but did not take them.

“I’m not signing anything.”

“You don’t need to sign it for it to be served.”

His eyes flicked to Evan, looking for the soft place.

That had been his pattern from the beginning.

If I asked him to move groceries, he went to Evan.

If I asked him to clear the counter, he went to Evan.

If I said the guest room was too full, he went to Evan and said he felt unwanted.

He had learned that my boyfriend’s guilt was easier to push than my patience.

Only this time, Evan did not move.

“Take the papers, Tyler,” Evan said.

There was no anger in his voice.

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