Returning Home After 20 Years
After spending 20 years abroad, I finally returned to my sister’s house—the very one I had given her. I froze when I saw her lying on the doormat by the front door 😱😨. My only son laughed, telling the guests, “Don’t pay attention, that’s our crazy maid.” I stepped inside, ready to teach them a lesson they would never forget 😢.
The Journey Back
“Are you sure this is the place?” the taxi driver asked, slowing in front of a tall gate. “The house looks expensive. Are you certain they’re expecting you?”
I nodded. I wore a simple gray coat and worn-out boots—the only warm clothes I had after 20 years abroad. Two decades of work had been for this moment, so my family would have a home and security.
The house stood deep in a lush garden, large and well-kept, with a wide porch. I carried a small bag, walking along the path. The front door was open. Music and laughter drifted out—there was a party inside.
A Cruel Discovery
I entered quietly. Guests in expensive suits and elegant dresses held glasses, chatting and laughing. No one noticed me. I stayed near the wall.
Then I looked down. On the doormat lay a woman curled up, asleep in old clothes, covered with a thin blanket. Horror struck. This woman was my sister—the one I had gifted this house to. She lay there shivering, abandoned at the very door of her own home.
A man appeared from inside with a glass in his hand. My son. He laughed loudly, wiping his feet on my sister as he passed by.
“Don’t pay attention,” he said with a smirk. “That’s our crazy maid.”
The guests laughed awkwardly. My world collapsed. I could not believe how cruelly my sister was treated.
Taking Control
I stopped in the foyer. Silence fell naturally.
“My sister is not a doormat,” I said calmly.
My son turned, first confused, then irritated.
“Mom,” he sneered, “we’re busy right now. Sorry.”
I bent down and helped my sister sit up. Her eyes met mine, as if she had always known I would come that day. I straightened and addressed everyone.
“The reception can end. This house is no longer yours.”
A guest laughed nervously. I placed a thin folder on a table by the wall.
“Twenty years ago, I gifted this house with one condition: the person living here must be treated decently. That condition has been violated.”
My son went pale.
“That’s impossible…” he began.
“All documents are signed. The notice is registered. From this moment, you have no legal grounds to stay here,” I continued.
One guest set down their glass. The music now sounded out of place.
“The police will arrive within an hour. You have time to gather your personal belongings and leave.”
My son stared at me as if seeing me for the first time—in the house he thought was his.