My Family Stole My Key And Tried To Move My Sister Into My Garage-ngyen

I came home early from Germany with a suitcase that rolled badly, a damp coat, and a head full of small, ordinary wishes.

I wanted my own kettle, my own mug, and the particular quiet of my kitchen after the heating had clicked off.

Sixteen days in Frankfurt had left me worn thin by airport coffee, stiff hotel pillows, delayed trains, and meetings where everyone smiled while secretly checking the time.

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When my final appointment finished early, I changed my flight without telling anyone.

That choice felt harmless.

Private, even.

I imagined three quiet days before the usual family questions began.

Meline would ask whether I had brought her anything.

My father would ask whether the trip had been worth all the fuss.

My mother would remind me, gently at first, that my sister was having a difficult time.

In our family, everything began with Meline having a difficult time.

Someone else always softened, paid, drove, forgave, or pretended not to mind.

For years, that someone was usually me.

My house was the one place where I had tried to stop apologising.

It was not a mansion.

It had three bedrooms, wide windows, a narrow hallway, a small back garden, and a garage I had planned with more care than some people put into a wedding.

The garage held my tools, my storage, my workbench, and my old dark-green Mustang, the one thing I had protected through bad flats, worse relationships, and years of being told I took life too seriously.

The house had cost £880,000.

My family loved that number.

They used it to boast about me when it suited them, then used it to accuse me when they wanted access.

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