My Parents Doubled My Rent So My Unemployed Sister Could Move In, So I Moved Out and Took Everything

There it was. The script I’d lived inside my whole life.

Lauren can handle it. So Lauren should.

Vanessa needs help. So everyone should bend around Vanessa.

I hung up and sat on the edge of my bed in the dim light of my bedroom lamp, listening to the faint echo of laughter from the living room, Vanessa already back out there like nothing happened.

Something settled inside me then, heavy and clear.

Nothing was going to change as long as I stayed in this apartment.

A week later, the email arrived.

It came from my father, subject line crisp and official: “Rent Adjustment Notice.”

Even before I opened it, my stomach turned cold. My father never wrote emails like that unless my mother had instructed him to. He played the messenger because he was gentler, because he made the blow feel less like a blow.

I opened it with trembling fingers.

The letter was formal, typed like a business document. It informed me that due to increased property maintenance costs and market adjustments, my rent would be increasing by one hundred percent, effective the first of the next month.

Doubling.

With three weeks’ notice.

My throat tightened so hard I could barely swallow. My vision blurred, not from migraine this time, but from the sudden sting of tears.

I called my father immediately.

“There has to be a mistake,” I said as soon as he answered. I stood in my kitchen staring at the wall, like if I looked at anything else I might break something.

“No mistake,” my father said. His voice was careful. “Property values have gone up. We’ve been undercharging you for a while.”

“Doubling it overnight?” I asked, incredulous. “That’s not reasonable.”

“We feel it’s fair,” he said, and I could hear the strain in his voice, as if he didn’t fully believe it but had decided to say it anyway.

“Dad,” I said, voice low, “is this because I complained about Vanessa?”

There was a pause long enough to confirm the answer before he spoke.

He sighed. “Your mother and I think you’re being unnecessarily difficult. Vanessa needs support right now.”

“So it’s punishment,” I said.

“It’s not punishment,” he insisted. “It’s reality. If you want to live alone, you pay market rate. If you want the family rate, you help the family.”

The words landed like a trap snapping shut.

I did mental math. At the new rate, rent would take nearly half my take-home pay. Half. Then utilities, which were already inflated by Vanessa. Student loans. Food. Transportation. I’d be left with almost nothing. No savings. No safety net. No ability to keep chipping away at debt. The progress I’d been proud of would stall, maybe reverse.

“I can’t afford this,” I said. “You know I can’t.”