“What’s happening is my daughter is walking through the heat with a swollen ankle and a baby in her arms because someone decided she shouldn’t have access to her own car.”
Silence settled heavily.
Rosa crossed her arms.
“They’re living in my house,” she said coldly. “There are rules.”
“Rules don’t include mistreating someone,” Dad replied. “And they certainly don’t include taking transportation away from a mother with a baby.”
Luis looked uncomfortable.
“Cami, we talked about this…”
Something shifted inside me.
Maybe it was Dad’s calm certainty.
Maybe it was hearing the truth spoken aloud.
“No,” I said quietly. “You nodded while your mother made all the decisions.”
Rosa scoffed.
“I’m just maintaining order.”
Dad stepped forward.
“Order is not control. And it’s not making my daughter feel grateful just for surviving under your roof.”
Luis swallowed.
“The car is in my name…”
“She pays for it,” Dad interrupted calmly. “And regardless of that, no woman should feel trapped because someone else controls her ability to move.”
Rosa laughed dismissively.
“Trapped? You’re being dramatic.”
That’s when Dad reached into his back pocket and pulled out an envelope.
“Inside is a lease agreement,” he said. “An apartment fifteen minutes away. I already spoke to the owner. It’s ready tomorrow.”
My heart stopped.
“You… what?”
Dad looked at me.
“I started looking after I heard Luis lost his job. I thought they might need help.”
Rosa went silent.
Luis stared at the envelope.
“We can’t afford that.”
“I’m not paying,” Dad said. “Camila can. She always could. What she needed was space to breathe.”
Tears slipped down my cheeks.
Because it was true.
I had been saving money quietly.
Budgeting.
Sacrificing.
Trying not to inconvenience anyone.
Dad turned to me.
“The choice is yours. But you don’t have to stay somewhere that makes you feel small.”
Rosa’s face turned pale.
“If you leave, don’t expect help from us again.”
For the first time…
That threat didn’t scare me.
It felt freeing.
Luis looked at me.
“Cami… I didn’t want this.”
“But you allowed it,” I said gently.
Mateo fussed from the car.
Dad lifted him carefully and whispered softly,
“Let’s go home.”
Home.
Not their house.
Home.
I looked at Luis.
“You can come with us,” I said. “But I’m done being grateful just for getting by.”
Rosa laughed bitterly.
Luis hesitated, then said quietly,
“Mom… give her the car keys.”
Rosa froze.
“What?”
“The keys.”
She angrily dug through her purse and tossed them toward me. They hit the ground.
Dad bent down, picked them up, and placed them in my hand.
“Never accept something that belongs to you being thrown away,” he said quietly.
Luis took a deep breath.
“I’m coming with you.”
Rosa stepped back in shock.
“You’re leaving me?”
“No,” he replied calmly. “I’m growing up.”
I didn’t know if that would fix everything.
But for the first time, our choices weren’t driven by fear.
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