Grandmother Asked Why Strangers Were Living In My House-heuh

At Thanksgiving, while I was trying not to think about being nearly homeless, living on £12.50 and sleeping on friends’ sofas, my grandmother came back from overseas, looked past me at my parents and my younger sister Ashley, and calmly asked why an elderly couple she had never met was living in the million-pound lakeside house she bought for me three years ago.

For a moment, I thought I had heard her wrong.

The dining room smelled of turkey, rosemary, melted butter, and garlic that had been used as if it might cover every old family sin.

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My mother had set the table with the good plates, the ones that only appeared when she wanted us to act respectable.

Folded cloth napkins sat beneath polished cutlery.

Candles threw soft light over the wineglasses.

The whole room looked warm, careful, and decent.

That was always Mum’s talent.

She could make a room look kind even when nobody in it had been kind to me for years.

I had come straight from my second shift.

My black trousers had a coffee stain near the pocket, and my flats were the cheap kind that looked fine in the shop and punished you by midday.

I sat between an empty chair and the edge of the table, trying not to look as tired as I felt.

My phone stayed face-down beside my fork.

I did not need to check it again.

That morning, at 9:18, I had stood in the bathroom of a friend’s flat while her children shouted over cartoons in the hallway and opened my banking app.

£12.50.

That was what I had.

Not enough for rent.

Not enough for groceries.

Barely enough to keep pretending I was between places instead of admitting I had nowhere of my own.

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