On Christmas, my younger sister was given a brand-new BMW with a huge red bow sitting in the garage. I opened my gift — it was a pair of $2 socks. My mom laughed and said, ‘Stay humble, everyone gets what they deserve.’ At 2 a.m., I quietly packed my suitcase, walked out, and cut off contact. Before I closed the door, I placed a Christmas gift under their tree.

“All those years of hard work finally paying off.”

Dad raised his beer bottle in a toast. “To our successful daughter. You’ve always been the responsible one.”

Even my sister Emma, usually glued to her phone, looked up long enough to congratulate me.

“That’s awesome, Sienna,” she said. “Maybe now you can finally get a decent car.”

She wasn’t wrong. I’d been driving the same silver Honda Civic since college, a reliable little car with 150,000 miles on it and a passenger door that stuck every winter.

I’d been dreaming of upgrading for years. But then came the conversation that changed everything. “Honey,” Mom started as we cleared the dishes that night, her voice taking on that careful tone I’d learned to recognize.

The one that meant something big and uncomfortable was coming. “Now that you’re doing so well financially, we were hoping you might be able to help us with something. Just temporarily.”

The restaurant business had been hit hard during the pandemic, Dad explained.

Their cozy little family restaurant off the interstate had taken a beating. They’d fallen behind on the mortgage payments and were facing serious late fees on the house. “Just until we get back on our feet,” he promised.

“Maybe six months at most.”

I didn’t hesitate. These were my parents—the people who’d raised me, put me through college, supported my dreams. Of course I’d help them through a rough patch.

That’s what family does, right? “How much do you need?” I asked. “Well, the mortgage payment is $1,400 a month,” Mom said carefully.

“If you could help with that temporarily, we could catch up on the back payments with the restaurant income.”

Fourteen hundred dollars. It was a big chunk of my new salary, but still manageable. I set up an automatic transfer that very week from my downtown bank to theirs.

Problem solved. Family crisis averted. Except it wasn’t temporary.

Six months came and went with no mention of resuming the payments themselves. A year passed, then two, then three. The “temporary help” had quietly become permanent, a second rent I paid on a house I didn’t live in.

And somehow nobody ever brought up the fact that I was still paying their mortgage. Meanwhile, the restaurant seemed to be doing fine. Dad bought new equipment for the kitchen—a shiny flat‑top grill he bragged about on Facebook.

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