They Told The Woman Paying Every Bill To Leave Their House For Good-lequyen994 - Chainityai

They Told The Woman Paying Every Bill To Leave Their House For Good-lequyen994

Gene Hollis told me to pack my things while sitting in the recliner I had bought him for Christmas.

He did not look up from his phone.

That is the detail that stayed with me long after the boxes were gone, long after the lawyers had finished, long after I stopped waking up with my heart racing at every notification.

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He did not look at the woman who had kept his lights on.

He just pointed toward the stairs and said Megan needed more room.

Megan was Travis’s younger sister, twenty-eight, permanently between plans, and engaged in a long argument with adulthood that adulthood seemed to be losing.

Her boyfriend Doug had arrived for Thanksgiving one year and somehow become part of the furniture.

Now they were going to try for a baby, which meant, according to the family meeting I had not been invited to, they needed the master bedroom and the upstairs office turned into a suite.

I was expected to disappear politely.

Brenda, my mother-in-law, stood by the counter with her arms crossed, already behaving like the decision had been hard on her.

“It is not personal,” she said, which is what people say right before they make it personal.

Travis leaned against the doorway.

I looked at him, waiting for my husband to remember that he was my husband.

He looked at the floor and said, “It might be good for us. A place of our own.”

For a moment, I almost laughed.

Not because it was funny, but because there are sentences so false they become perfect.

A place of our own meant a place I would pay for.

Just like I had paid for almost everything else.

The Hollis house outside Columbus had no mortgage, which made everyone talk about it like it was free.

But no house is free while people are living in it.

Taxes come.

Insurance comes.

The electric company does not care that Grandpa built the back addition with his own hands.

The gas bill does not lower itself because Brenda calls Sunday dinner a tradition.

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