She Raised Alice’s Rent For Her Sister. The Moving Truck Changed Everything-felicia

At six in the morning, my jobless sister appeared at the apartment I rented from my parents and declared, “I’m staying here.” Then Mom announced, “We’re raising your rent to cover the extra costs.” When I said I would simply move out, they smiled like I was making an empty threat.

The garage apartment had never been fancy, but it had been mine in every way that mattered.

It sat behind my parents’ house, above the old double garage, with a narrow staircase that collected rainwater in the corners and a window that rattled whenever the wind came from the west.

Image

When I first moved in, Dad called it a favor.

Mom called it sensible.

I called it the only place I could afford while working enough hours to build a future that did not depend on asking permission.

The walls were a tired cream when I arrived, scuffed by storage boxes and years of being treated as a spare space rather than a home.

I painted them myself over one long weekend, wearing old leggings and a sweatshirt with bleach on the sleeve, eating toast over the sink because I had not yet bought a table.

The tap dripped then.

Dad said he would get to it.

He did not.

So I watched three repair videos, bought the cheapest kit I could find, and spent a Saturday afternoon lying under the sink with water running down my wrist until the washer finally seated properly.

That was how most things went there.

If something broke, I fixed it.

If something looked bare, I saved for it.

If something felt temporary, I made it solid with my own hands and whatever little money I could spare from my paycheck.

The sofa came from a woman across town who said her dog had scratched one side, which was true, but the frame was good.

I borrowed a small hand sander, cleaned the legs, stitched a small tear, and turned it into the first piece of furniture I had ever owned that made me feel like an adult.

The glass coffee table was worse when I bought it.

One corner had been chipped, and the metal frame had rust at the bottom, but I saw it under fluorescent charity-shop lighting and thought it could be beautiful if somebody cared enough.

I cared enough.

The mattress took three overtime weekends.

The curtains took two more.

The second-hand rug by the door cost less than dinner for four, but I loved the dull blue pattern because it made the entrance look intentional.

For two years, I paid rent to my parents every month.

Read More