She Stole My Prescription Cream, Then The Report Broke Her Lie-lequyen994 - Chainityai

She Stole My Prescription Cream, Then The Report Broke Her Lie-lequyen994

My husband and I had been homeowners for seven months when his little sister started treating our house like a place where rules did not apply to her.

It was not a huge house.

It was the kind of first home where one room still smelled like fresh paint, the guest bathroom had no extra towels, and every weekend had a list of things that needed fixing.

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But it was ours.

That mattered to me.

I had spent years saving, working, budgeting, and imagining the first morning I would drink coffee in a kitchen that belonged to my husband and me.

Then Sarah got her driver’s license.

Sarah was sixteen, dramatic in the way some teenagers are dramatic, and deeply used to being forgiven before she even finished making the mess.

At first, when she started dropping by, I tried to see it as sweet.

My husband was her older brother.

Maybe she missed him.

Maybe she liked having a quiet place to escape to after school.

Maybe I was being too sensitive about the way she kicked off her shoes, opened our fridge, and grabbed the television remote like she had paid the mortgage.

Then the comments started.

“You know my brother is still mine, right?”

She said it one afternoon while standing in my kitchen, eating strawberries I had washed for myself.

She smiled when she said it.

My husband did not hear her.

I laughed lightly because that is what women are trained to do when a rude sentence arrives wrapped in a joke.

But I remembered it.

There were more.

She would say our couch was more comfortable than “her side” of the family room at home.

She would complain that I bought boring snacks.

She would wander into rooms that were not for guests and act surprised when I looked uncomfortable.

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