At midnight my sister tried to bring her three children into my apartment with my mother’s key, but when she yelled at me “family helps each other”, I had already changed the lock and was waiting for her downstairs to put a stop to it. — Part 2

Sienna came to a dead stop in the middle of the lobby floor and stared at him with an expression of pure, unadulterated disbelief.

Then her eyes shifted toward the corner of the room where I was standing with my arms crossed and my back against a marble pillar.

“Are you honestly playing some kind of sick joke on me, Leona, because it is one o’clock in the morning and we are exhausted?” she demanded.

“That is precisely why you should have picked up the phone to ask me for help instead of assuming you could treat my home like a free hotel,” I countered.

She let out a sharp and incredulous laugh while she adjusted the sleeping toddler on her hip and took a step toward me.

“I sent you a message to warn you that we were coming, so don’t act like this is some massive surprise that caught you off guard.”

“You didn’t warn me, Sienna, you simply informed me of your decision to violate my boundaries, and those two things are not the same at all,” I replied.

The wheels of her suitcase rattled loudly against the polished stone floor as she moved further into the lobby, ignoring the guard’s watchful presence.

“We just flew in from Nashville and we missed our connecting flight to Tampa, and every hotel near the terminal was either booked solid or charging five hundred dollars a night,” she explained.

“You live right here in the city, and I thought any decent sister would want to help her nephews get some sleep after a nightmare of a travel day.”

I looked down at the children and felt a sharp pang of genuine sadness because they were clearly caught in the middle of a mess they didn’t create.

Tessa looked like she was on the verge of tears, and Hudson was swaying on his feet as he tried to stay awake in the brightly lit lobby.

I was about to offer a compromise when the front doors opened again and my mother rushed inside with a floral shawl thrown over her nightgown.

“Leona, what on earth is going on here, because Frank just told me that the key I have doesn’t work for your door anymore?” she cried out.

I watched her hold up that old brass key as if it were a scepter of maternal authority that gave her the right to govern my life.

In that moment, standing before the three people who had spent my entire adult life ignoring my needs, I realized that I had reached a point of no return.

“Did you really change the locks in the middle of the night just to keep your own sister out in the rain?” my mother asked as she walked toward me.

“I am not doing this to be cruel, Mom, I am doing this because I am finally finished with being treated like an afterthought in my own home,” I said.

Sienna shifted Milo to her other shoulder and gave me the same condescending look she had used to manipulate me since we were toddlers in the sandbox.

“I have three small children with me, Leona, and I am not out here trying to party or ruin your night for my own entertainment.”

“Your situation is unfortunate, but having children does not grant you a universal pass to ignore the word no when I say it to you,” I responded.

My mother stepped between us and threw her hands up in a gesture of frantic desperation as if she could simply wish the conflict away.

“You are making a mountain out of a molehill because of your pride, and you need to remember that family is supposed to support each other during hard times,” she scolded.

“Family is also supposed to respect each other enough not to hand out keys to apartments they don’t own behind the owner’s back,” I reminded her.

My mother went quiet for a split second, but Sienna was far from finished with her attempt to shame me into submission.

“You have always been so cold and calculated, and you would clearly rather prove a point than show a single ounce of compassion for your own blood,” she snapped.

I took a deep breath and consciously decided not to give them the explosive reaction they were clearly hoping for to justify their own behavior.

“And you have always looked at other people as if they were nothing more than tools designed to make your life more comfortable,” I said calmly.

Frank pretended to be busy with the digital logbook on his desk, but it was obvious that he was hanging on every single word of our conversation.

The air in the lobby felt thick with the smell of old rain and the sterile scent of floor wax while the silence stretched out between us.

“That is quite enough out of you, Leona, and I want you to apologize to your sister right now and take these children upstairs to bed,” my mother commanded.

“The answer is no, and I am not going to change my mind just because you are standing here and demanding it of me,” I told her.

Sienna let the handle of her heavy stroller drop to the floor with a loud thud that echoed through the high ceilings of the lobby.

“This is absolutely outrageous, and I cannot believe you are really going to leave your own nephews out on the street because of a petty tantrum,” she yelled.

“I never said I was going to leave them out on the street, and I would appreciate it if you stopped exaggerating the situation to make me look like a villain,” I replied.

I pulled my phone out of my pocket and turned the screen around so they could see the confirmation page for the reservation I had made.

“I booked a luxury family suite at the Marriott right next to the airport about thirty minutes ago, and it has two queen beds and a full breakfast included,” I explained.

“The shuttle van is already on its way here to pick you up, and I have already provided my credit card for the entire stay so you won’t have to pay a dime.”

Continue to Part 3 Part 2 of 4

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