Grandpa suddenly stopped chewing. “Wait… you’re paying rent to your own parents?” I froze in my seat. Before I could respond, Dad brushed the question aside with a careless wave. “Your sister has two kids,” he said. “She needs the help more than you.” Silence spread across the table as Grandpa slowly lowered his fork. No one was prepared for what he said next…

Part 1

Grandpa Howard stopped eating in the middle of Thanksgiving dinner.

The whole table went silent.

His eyes moved from my father to me, sharp and unbelieving.

“Wait,” he said slowly. “You’re making Roxanne pay rent?”

My father, Paul, wiped gravy from his mouth like the question barely mattered.

“She’s twenty-two,” he said. “Adults who live here should contribute.”

My mother nodded quickly. “And Vanessa has two children. She needs help more than Roxanne does.”

Vanessa stared down at her plate, saying nothing.

I sat at the end of the table in my bakery shoes, exhausted from a 4 a.m. shift. Flour still clung to the soles. My legs ached under the table, but I kept my hands folded in my lap.

My name is Roxanne Miller.

In my family, I was the quiet daughter. The dependable one. The one everyone expected to pay.

Grandpa looked at me.

“How much?” he asked.

I swallowed hard.

“Nine hundred dollars,” I whispered.

The room froze.

Grandpa’s face changed completely. The warmth disappeared, replaced by cold fury.

He asked why I was paying almost a thousand dollars a month to sleep in a basement.

Because that was where I lived.

Not in a real bedroom. Not in an apartment.

Half of an unfinished concrete basement, separated from storage boxes by an old sheet. I bought my own food, paid my own bills, and could only use the washing machine late at night.

Dad said Vanessa needed support because she had kids.

Mom said I was young and single, so I could afford it.

Then Grandpa asked how long this had been happening.

“Since I turned twenty-one,” I admitted.

He went very still.

Then he stood and said, “Roxanne, help me in the kitchen.”

Dad tried to stop him, but Grandpa’s voice turned hard.

“It wasn’t a request.”

Part 2

In the kitchen, Grandpa asked me to tell him the truth.

I tried to defend my parents at first. I said it wasn’t so bad. I said I worked overtime. I repeated the excuses I had been trained to believe.

But little by little, the truth came out.

The rent had started at four hundred dollars. Then six hundred. Then, when Vanessa moved back home with her sons, it became nine hundred.

Every time I tried to save money and leave, a new family emergency appeared.

Dad’s truck needed repairs.

Mom said the bills were too high.

Vanessa needed money for her kids.

And when I said I couldn’t help anymore, Mom cried and called me selfish.

Grandpa listened quietly.

Then he asked something strange.

“Did you ever get mail from the credit union downtown?”

I frowned. I told him I didn’t check the main mailbox. Mom always brought the mail in and left anything for me on the basement stairs.

Grandpa’s expression darkened.

Before he could explain, Mom came into the kitchen, smiling too brightly.

“What are you two whispering about?”

Grandpa walked straight to the front hall and opened the old mail cabinet. Mom panicked. Dad stormed in and demanded he stop.

But Grandpa kept searching.

Then he found envelopes with my full name on them.

They were from the credit union.

One had already been opened.

Mom tried to grab them, claiming they were junk mail, but Grandpa held them away.

That was when everything began to unravel.

I realized my parents had been hiding my mail.

Grandpa opened one envelope and read the document inside. His face filled with disgust.

Then he looked at Dad.

“How long have you known about this account?”

Dad said nothing.

Grandpa turned to me, his voice breaking.

“Sweetheart, this money was supposed to help you get out.”

Click Here to continues Read​​​​ Full Ending Story👉PART3: Grandpa suddenly stopped chewing. “Wait… you’re paying rent to your own parents?” I froze in my seat. Before I could respond, Dad brushed the question aside with a careless wave. “Your sister has two kids,” he said. “She needs the help more than you.” Silence spread across the table as Grandpa slowly lowered his fork. No one was prepared for what he said next…

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