“Get out, your sister needs the room.” – One day after my C-section, my parents kicked me out for my sister’s newborn.

“Get out, your sister needs the room.” – One day after my C-section, my parents kicked me out for my sister’s newborn.

My parents continued living there because of our tolerance.
They didn’t pay rent, on the condition that they covered utilities and maintained a minimum level of cohabitation.

They never told anyone about it.

Daniela was allowed to believe that it was still “Mom and Dad’s house.”
And I was made to carry the guilt every time I hinted at setting boundaries.

I had put up with that for years.
But Mateo had been warning me for months that it was going to end badly.

As soon as he left the police station, he sent a legal document revoking his permission to use the apartment due to assault and coercion against one of the owners.

She also attached a copy of the deed and demanded payment for the water, electricity, and maintenance bills that we had been covering for some time.
Because my parents always found an excuse not to pay them.

The next day, he returned to the building with two police officers to collect my things, the folding crib and the medication that they had left upstairs.

I waited in the car.
With Valeria asleep on my chest.

From the window, I saw my mother turn pale.
When one of the officers asked her for her identification “as an occupant.”

I watched my father try to explain himself with a certainty that gradually dissolved as Mateo placed papers on the car’s trunk.

And I saw Daniela, in the middle of the building, reading the first page of the document.
Her eyes were wide open, as if the ground had split beneath her feet.

“Mom,” I heard him say, “tell me this is a lie.”

But it wasn’t.

And the worst was yet to come.

The following weeks were a slow-motion collapse.

First came the summons for the complaint.
Then, the notification of the civil proceedings to recover the property.

My mother thought it would be enough to call some aunts and say that Mateo was manipulating me.
That I was “sensitive because of hormones” and that I had exaggerated a domestic argument.

He didn’t count on Mateo keeping everything.

He gave the lawyer Daniela’s messages.
The loan receipts that had saved the apartment.
The bills we were still paying.
And, above all, a recording of the building’s intercom.

I couldn’t see the hair-pulling.
But I could hear my mother’s screams perfectly.
My father’s voice telling them to get me out of there.
And, finally, Daniela’s words when I was already outside on the street.

The building also had a camera at the entrance.


I could be seen leaving, bent over, with the basket in one hand and dragging my suitcase.

With that evidence, the case stopped seeming like a family fight.

My mother was convicted of minor assault and coercion.
She received a fine, a restraining order, and a criminal record that cost her a job offer she had secured at a care home.

My father was convicted of coercion as an accomplice.
He was also ordered to be jointly liable for some of the medical and legal expenses.

Daniela was not criminally charged.
However, she was named in the civil proceedings as an unauthorized occupant.

When he realized the apartment wouldn’t be his.
Or my parents’.
Or a free refuge to raise his son.
He started arguing with everyone.

The father of her baby, who until then appeared and disappeared as he pleased, refused to continue financing her hotels and temporary rentals.

For the first time in her life, Daniela was left without a safety net built on someone else’s sacrifice.

The civil trial took months.
But it turned out as Mateo had predicted.

The judge acknowledged that my parents were occupying the house merely due to the owners’ tolerance.
And that this tolerance had clearly ended.

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