My Sister Came With Mom’s Secret Key, But I Had Already Changed the Lock-tete

“Mom, that key stopped being yours the night you used it to give my sister permission to walk into my life without asking.”

The lobby went completely silent.

Even the rain against the glass doors seemed quieter.

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My mother stared at me like I had slapped her.

Sienna’s hand tightened around the suitcase handle. Her oldest daughter, Tessa, looked down at her shoes.

Frank, the security guard, shifted slightly but said nothing.

For once, nobody rushed to fill the silence for me.

My mother finally lowered the key.

“Leona,” she said, voice shaking with outrage, “your sister has children.”

“I know,” I said. “That’s why I’m angry.”

Sienna’s face changed.

She expected me to defend myself. She expected guilt. She expected me to fold because the kids were standing there.

But I had folded for years.

I had folded when Sienna borrowed my car and returned it empty.

I had folded when she used my credit card “just once” and took three months to pay me back.

I had folded when Mom told me, “You know how your sister is.”

As if being difficult was a medical condition.

As if I was born responsible for absorbing it.

Sienna adjusted Milo on her shoulder.

“We missed a connection,” she said sharply. “We needed somewhere to sleep.”

“No,” I said. “You needed a plan. You chose my apartment because you thought I couldn’t say no.”

Her jaw hardened.

“Wow. So now you’re punishing my kids?”

That one landed exactly where she aimed it.

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