Then we’ll put it in Megan’s name and move in with her and the baby.”
My stomach dropped. “She doesn’t need it anyway,” Mom continued. “No husband, no kids.
Just work, work, work. She’s made it clear money is all she cares about.”
Then Dad chimed in. “It’s only fair.
Megan has a child. That’s what family’s about. Anna chose not to.
Let her earn the money while we build something real with Megan.”
My heart slammed against my ribs. My house? The one I bled for?
They wanted to trick me into signing it away? I backed out quietly and locked myself in my room. I stared at the ceiling for hours, brain buzzing with static.
By the time the sun set, I knew what I had to do. Playing Along
The next morning, I put on a smile and started playing along. I became sweeter, more generous.
I nodded when Dad made comments like, “A house like this should belong to someone with a future—like Megan and the baby.”
I smiled when Mom sighed theatrically about how “a true family woman would share.”
And then, one week later, I dropped the bait. “I think I’m ready to sign the house over,” I announced casually at breakfast. Mom’s fork clattered against her plate.
Dad’s eyes lit up. “Really, sweetheart?” Mom gushed. “That’s… so generous of you.”
“Of course,” I said smoothly.
“But it all has to be official. At a lawyer’s office.”
They didn’t question it. Not once.
Maybe they thought they had finally worn me down. Maybe they thought I was too naive to see through them. Or maybe they were just arrogant enough to believe I’d hand over my life without a fight.
The Setup
I called my friend Daniel, a real estate attorney, who agreed to let me use one of his firm’s conference rooms—and the adjoining one next to it. I also called Megan. “Hey,” I said brightly, “come by tomorrow at 2 p.m.
I’ve got something big to offer you. Real big.”
She showed up twenty minutes early, dragging her toddler along like luggage. Meanwhile, Mom and Dad dressed up for their “meeting.” Mom wore her favorite perfume, Dad practiced a little speech about “building a legacy.” They were practically giddy.
I asked them to wait in one conference room while I “finalized details” in the next. They didn’t notice the thin wall between the two rooms. The Sting
I greeted Megan with a stack of official-looking paperwork.
“Here’s the deal,” I said. “The house and the car. Yours.
But in exchange, I need one thing—a written agreement that you’ll place Mom and Dad in a retirement facility. Permanently. No future at-home care obligations.”
Megan didn’t even blink.
“Oh my God, yes! They’re exhausting. Honestly, I’d send them tonight if I could.
If you’re really giving me the house and car, that’s a done deal!”
And right then, the adjoining door swung open. There stood Mom and Dad, mid-step, faces frozen in horror. “You… you were going to sell us?
For a house and a car?” Mom whispered, her voice trembling. Megan’s face drained of color. “Wait—I didn’t mean—”
I stood slowly, gathering my bag.
“I was never going to sign over the house. But it’s good to know how quickly you all sold each other out.”
Dad stepped forward, voice tight. “Anna, we were just scared.
It wasn’t personal.”
“No,” I said flatly. “It was calculated.”
Megan shushed her toddler awkwardly, eyes darting between us like I had become a stranger. I looked straight at her.
“They were willing to give you everything. Now it’s your turn to return the favor.”
Her mouth opened and closed, but I was already walking away. “None of you will ever set foot in my house again.
The locks are already changed. Your things will be delivered to Megan’s place by the end of the week.”
The Aftermath
True to my word, I had their boxes delivered. But Megan didn’t let them move in.
Not after what had happened in that conference room. Within a week, Mom and Dad were renting a dingy apartment outside of town. For the first time in nearly twenty years, they both got jobs.
Mom started tutoring Spanish. Dad stocked shelves at a grocery store on the night shift. A neighbor later told me he saw Dad crying in his car after his first shift.
I didn’t gloat. But I also didn’t feel sorry. For once, their consequences were their own.
My New Life
As for me? I slept. For the first time in years, I slept deeply.
I started hiking on weekends. I took a painting class at the community center. I read books just for fun—not self-help manuals, not budgeting guides.
Actual novels. And then I met someone. Ethan.
He was gentle, thoughtful. An engineer who fixed things for a living but didn’t try to fix people. He asked about my favorite artists instead of my job.
He carried silence well. One night, across a candlelit table, he asked softly, “Do you ever want kids?”
I hesitated. “Maybe.
But only if I know I won’t be raising them alone.”
He nodded. “Fair.”
We’re still talking about it. About kids, about building something together.
For the first time, the future feels like mine. I’m not anyone’s scapegoat anymore. I’m not the responsible one who carries everyone else’s baggage.
I’m just living. And finally—finally—I’m free.