Then he began to invite his friends over without any warning and spoke about the property as if he were the one who had signed the deed. “We really need to knock down this interior wall to create an open concept living space,” he would say while gesturing around my kitchen with a proprietary air.
He talked about building a massive outdoor kitchen on the patio, completely ignoring the fact that his grand plans would require destroying the workshop where I still worked every day. While Tyson grew more arrogant and loud within those walls, I watched as my daughter seemed to shrink and become more invisible with every passing month.
Whenever I tried to voice my concerns about his behavior, Shelby would tell me that I was being overly dramatic or that Tyson was simply stressed from his job search. “You should just be grateful that you aren’t living all alone in this big house at your age,” she would whisper whenever his temper flared up in the kitchen.
That night after he yelled at me in front of his friends, I quietly walked back to the kitchen and turned off the stove where I had been preparing dinner for everyone. I retreated to my bedroom without eating a single bite and sat on the edge of my bed while looking at my worn, calloused hands in the dim light.
I wept silently because for the first time in my life, I felt like a complete stranger in the very home that I had sacrificed everything to create and maintain. The next morning I pulled out my old accounting ledger and began to calculate exactly how much money I had loaned to Shelby over the last three years.
I saw the entries for five hundred dollars, then two thousand, and then an emergency payment of eight thousand that Tyson supposedly needed for a business venture. When I finally reached the bottom of the page, the total amount of money they owed me was over one hundred and fifty thousand dollars of my hard earned savings.
That same Monday morning while I was pinning a hem for a long time client, I looked out the window and saw Tyson walking through my backyard with a stranger. He was pointing at the land and the workshop with a wide grin on his face as if he were a real estate agent showing off a prime piece of investment property.
“There is plenty of room back here for a secondary rental unit, and we can easily tear down that old shed to make more space,” he told the man in the suit. I felt something deep inside of me snap in that moment, and I knew that the woman who had spent decades being silent was finally ready to speak up.
I walked outside and stood directly in front of them, demanding to know why a stranger was measuring my property without my permission or knowledge. The man in the suit shifted uncomfortably and looked at Tyson for an explanation, but Tyson just gave me a patronizing smile and told me to go back inside.