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I decided to surprise my parents for Easter. I used my old key to let myself into my childhood home, but all the furniture was different, and their photos were gone. Confused, I went out to the garage and found them. My elderly mother was huddled in a winter coat on a folding chair. “What is this?” I asked, my voice breaking. She wouldn’t meet my eyes. “It’s temporary,” she whispered. “Your sister and her boyfriend… they just needed some space in the house.”

I thought I was surprising my parents for Easter with flowers and chocolate—what I found instead surprised me to my core. My sister had kicked them out and made them living in the garage like homeless people.

Growing up, we were a happy family.

My sister Cassandra? She’s two years older. Loud, dramatic, always in and out of trouble. She’s sunshine. She can smile while destr0ying your life.

Anyway, this year, I decided to surprise my parents for Easter.

But when I came to this house… nothing.

I stood there, puzzled. Maybe they went out? But they never go out on Easter. I knocked. No answer.

I still had my old key, so I let myself in.

The furniture was all different. The family photos were gone too.

I stood there, heart racing. Did I go to the wrong house?

Then I heard her voice. Cassandra.

“Wait, you didn’t tell me your sister was coming.”

Then a guy laughed. “What, the golden goose? She’ll be gone by morning.”

I didn’t know what I was looking for. But then I saw the light through the side window. I opened the garage door slowly.
There my parent were.

My dad was sitting on a stool, fixing an old cabinet hinge. My mom was in a folding chair, wearing her winter coat inside.

“Oh,” she said softly. “Honey.”

I said, “Mom? What is this?”

She looked down. “It’s temporary.”

My dad didn’t even discover. “Your mom’s cold. I told her to wear gloves.”

“Why are you out here?” I said. My voice cracked. “What happened?”

They looked at each other. Then my mom said, “It’s nothing. Cassandra and Nathan just needed some space.”

“In the house?” I said.

“They’re fixing it up,” my mom whispered. “Just for a while.”

I just looked at my mom and said, real quiet, “Pack a bag. I’ll be back in an hour.”

She twinkled. “What?”

“You heard me.”

My dad set down his screwdriver. “Where are we going?”

“You’re not staying in this garage another night.”

Ten minutes later, I drove them to the nicest hotel in town.

“One room, two beds, full week,” I said at the front desk.

Back at the garage, I walked in with the keycard and a smile.

“We’re leaving now,” I said.

Once they were tucked into clean sheets with heat, cable, and real pillows, I went home — to my hotel room — and opened my laptop.

I’m a contracts manager. Cassandra may play games, but I play by the rules.

First, I collected our family’s digital files — my parents keep backups on an old thumb drive. Then, my mom and I went back to the garage the next day and opened the locked file cabinet. My mom’s eyes widened.

“It’s okay,” I told her. “Just trust me.”

Inside was everything I needed — property records, tax forms, insurance papers. And the house deed.

Cassandra’s name was nowhere. Just my dad’s and mom’s. Which meant Cassandra? Legally. Just. A. Guest. And guests can be removed.

I texted Cassandra.
“Hey. Wanna grab lunch tomorrow? Just us?”

“Wait. Really? You’re not mad?” Cassandra asked, suprised.

“No. I’ve been thinking. We should talk,” I replied cryptically.

She invited me in the café in a beige trench coat and too much lipstick.

“I’m so glad you reached out. I know it’s been tense, but I think we’re finally on the same page.”

I smiled. “I think so too.”

We ordered. I let her talk. About the house. About “renovations.” About how hard it is being the “only one who steps up.”

I waited until her plate was half-finished before I said, “You know… maybe you’re right. Maybe Mom and Dad do need help. Some structure.”

Her eyes lit up. “Exactly! That’s what I’ve been trying to say!”

“I even talked to a couple of realtors,” I said, pulling out my phone. “If we sell the house, we could put the money toward their long-term care. Maybe even help you and Nathan get your own place.”

She leaned in. “I knew you’d come around.”

“Also — I recorded this whole conversation.”

Then I stood up, left a twenty on the table, and walked out without looking back.

Three days later, I returned with a printed removal notice—and a police escort.
I pulled up to the house with a police escort and walked straight to the front door. Nathan opened it, wearing my dad’s robe and holding a mug like he owned the place.

He smirked. “You lost, sweetheart?”

I listened the notice. “Nope. But you’re about to be.”

Cassandra stepped into view just behind him, her smile fading the second she saw what I was holding.

“You can’t be serious,” she said.

“Oh, I’m very serious.”

“You’re not on the deed,” I cut in. “You’re not on the lease. You’re a guest. And guests don’t get to control.”

Nathan let out a laugh, haughty. “You can’t remove family.”


That’s when the officer stepped forward and said, “Actually, you’ve been served. I recommend you read the paperwork.”

They both went quiet.

That afternoon, my dad pulled me aside and handed me a folder. Inside was the house deed.

“If anything ever happens to us,” he said, “this is yours. You were the one who came back.”

I hugged him, and for a while neither of us said anything. We didn’t need to.

As for Cassandra?

She’s homeless woman now, staying with whatever friend will still talk to her. That we “turned our backs.” That we “stole her future.”

That Easter ended with a series of my family dramas, tulips in a vase on the table, and the laugh came back my home. It felt like home again.

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