Mum Threw Me Out — Then Dad Asked Why I Stopped Paying-heuh

Mum screamed, “Get out and never come back!” So I did.

Weeks later, Dad called to ask why I had stopped paying the mortgage, and the answer I gave him was the first time in my life nobody in that house had a single thing to say.

It started on a Sunday afternoon in my parents’ kitchen, with rain dulling the windows and the kettle clicking off on the side.

Image

I had come in tired, damp at the cuffs, with my work bag still cutting into my shoulder.

The first thing I noticed was not the silence.

It was the empty space outside where my car should have been.

Ethan had taken it again.

No call.

No text.

No “sorry, I’ll only be ten minutes”.

Just gone, as if my things belonged to the house and the house belonged to everyone except me.

By then I knew the pattern well enough to feel it in my jaw before anyone spoke.

If I complained, I was dramatic.

If Ethan complained, he was struggling.

If I needed something, I was selfish.

If Ethan wanted something, the whole family bent around him like wet cardboard.

He came back nearly an hour later, carrying a drink from the petrol station and wearing the easy expression of someone who had never had to calculate the cost of other people’s carelessness.

I was standing in the kitchen by then, still in my work clothes, with a letter from the bank half-hidden under a fridge magnet.

I said, “I needed the car for work.”

Ethan barely looked at me.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *