My family moved strangers into my house while I was at work, but the call I made from my front porch changed everything.-luna

I stood on my front porch with my phone in my hand, staring through my own open door like I was looking into someone else’s life.

Inside, my mother was still giving instructions.

My father was pretending not to look at me.

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My sister Talia had one hand on her hip, wearing that little smile she always wore when she thought the room had already chosen her side.

And Jace, the man I had never met, was standing in my living room beside a stack of boxes with his family’s name written on them in black marker.

He looked comfortable.

That was the part that made me cold.

Not embarrassed. Not angry in the usual way.

Cold.

Because he had looked around my house and decided it was available.

My house.

The one I bought after years of swallowing pride and stretching paychecks.

The one where I painted the kitchen cabinets myself at midnight because hiring someone was too expensive.

The one where I ate cereal for dinner for three months after closing costs drained my savings.

My mother stepped onto the porch like she was coming out to scold a teenager.

“Maris,” she said sharply. “Put the phone down and come inside so we can talk like adults.”

I almost laughed.

Adults did not move strangers into someone else’s home while she was at work.

Adults did not give away keys that were never theirs to give.

Adults did not call theft “family.”

I kept the phone against my ear.

The person on the other end answered again, this time firmer.

“Maris? What’s happening?”

I said, “Grant, I need you at my house. Right now. They used the spare key and moved people in.”

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