They Lived In My Duplex Free, Then Tried To Take The Whole Place-xurixuri

My mother called me arrogant in the kitchen of a duplex she had been living in for free.

The word came out under the soft buzz of the recessed lights, while the dishwasher breathed out warm steam and my father’s coffee cooled on the marble counter I had paid a contractor to install after a pipe burst behind the old cabinets.

Outside, snow tapped lightly against the windows, the kind of quiet Denver evening that should have made the house feel peaceful.

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Instead, my mother stood in front of me with her arms folded, talking like I had stolen something from her.

“You’re a very arrogant girl,” she said.

I remember looking at her face and trying to find the mother who used to bring me soup when I had the flu, the mother who once waited up for me after late college classes, the mother who told everyone her daughter was the responsible one.

That woman was not in the room.

In her place stood someone who had grown too comfortable inside a life I had built, someone who could look at my name on the mortgage and still speak as if my home belonged to the family by natural law.

I had not yelled.

I had not insulted her.

I had not slammed a cabinet, threatened anyone, or told my parents to pack their things.

I had simply refused to give the downstairs apartment of my duplex to my younger brother Tyler because he and Rachel were having a baby.

That was all.

One no.

After years of yes.

Tyler sat on my couch with his phone in his hand, one ankle crossed over the other, pretending to be bored by a conversation that was mostly about rewarding him.

He was thirty-one, unemployed again, and still treated like a boy who just needed one more break.

I was thirty-four, running a property management company in Denver, working sixty-hour weeks across buildings with frozen pipes, tenant disputes, roof leaks, late rent, broken furnaces, insurance adjusters, and emergency calls that never cared what time it was.

Somehow, in that room, I was the selfish one.

The duplex had never been family property.

It was mine.

My name was on the deed.

My name was on the mortgage.

My credit was tied to every payment, every repair, every risk, and every sleepless night after something broke and the estimate came in higher than expected.

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