My “jobless” brother threw me out because dinner wasn’t ready. “Freeloader—you contribute nothing,” he snapped. I said nothing… even when Mom chose him: “He owns this house. Leave.” Funny thing is—I was the one paying the mortgage. So I left… not just the house, but the country—and that’s when everything they built started falling apart.

My “jobless” brother threw me out because dinner wasn’t ready. “Freeloader—you contribute nothing,” he snapped. I said nothing… even when Mom chose him: “He owns this house. Leave.” Funny thing is—I was the one paying the mortgage. So I left… not just the house, but the country—and that’s when everything they built started falling apart.

My heart stopped dead in my chest.

Sitting in the exact center of the hallway, fully packed and zipped shut, were my two large suitcases.

I stared at the suitcases, my exhausted brain struggling to process the visual information. For a split second, I thought perhaps there had been a flood in my bedroom, or my mother had decided to aggressively clean the carpets.

Then, Brent stepped out of the living room.

He stood in the hallway, blocking the path to the kitchen. His arms were crossed tightly over his chest, his chin lifted in an arrogant, practiced posture. He looked like a man auditioning for the role of the tough, uncompromising patriarch.

“You can’t keep living here,” Brent announced. His voice wasn’t hesitant; it was loud, aggressive, and dripping with cruel authority. “You need to leave, Naomi. You’re thirty-four years old, living in your mother’s house. It’s honestly pathetic.”

I blinked, the sheer, staggering audacity of the statement temporarily short-circuiting my ability to speak. I looked at my suitcases, then back at the brother who hadn’t paid for his own cell phone bill in a decade.

“Brent…” I stammered, my voice hoarse from fatigue. “What are you talking about? I pay the mortgage.”

He laughed. It was a sharp, ugly, incredibly vicious sound that echoed in the small hallway.

“Yeah, you do,” Brent sneered, taking a step closer, towering over me. “Because you’re a parasite, Naomi.”

The word hit me like a physical, closed-fist slap across the face.

Parasite.

“You cling to this house,” Brent continued, his voice rising in volume, projecting his own profound insecurities directly onto me. “You stay here so you can pretend you’re needed! You hold your little checks over our heads like a dictator, trying to control everything! You suffocate this family with your presence. I’m the man of this house now, and I’m telling you to get out. We don’t need you here breathing down our necks.”

I stood frozen in the entryway. My eyes automatically darted toward the kitchen doorway.

My mother appeared from the shadows of the kitchen. She was twisting a damp dish towel nervously in her hands. Her eyes darted frantically between Brent’s furious, red face and my shocked, pale one.

I waited. I waited for the woman I had sacrificed my thirties for, the woman whose bankruptcy I had personally prevented, to step forward. I waited for her to look at her unemployed son and say, ‘That’s enough, Brent. Naomi pays for everything. This is her home.’

Instead, my mother took a hesitant step backward.

“Naomi, please,” she whispered, her voice a fragile, trembling plea. “Please don’t fight with him. Brent’s just so stressed lately. You know how he gets. You always make things so much worse when you argue with him. Maybe you should just… go stay at a hotel for a few days until he calms down.”

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