My Pregnant Sister-in-Law Turned Me into Her Maid – I Played Her Game Until She Crossed the Line

I wasn’t going to cry anymore. I wasn’t going to beg for respect in my own family home.

And I wasn’t going to sit back while someone used their pregnancy as a crown and scepter to rule over everyone around them.

So, the next morning, I made a phone call.

I called my friend Elise, who works at a local community center that supports women going through divorce and major life transitions. She knew my whole story and she’d mentioned before that she knew someone who needed help.

“There’s this lovely older woman named Mrs. Chen,” Elise explained.

“Her husband passed last year, and she needs someone to help with cooking and light housekeeping. It’s part-time, live-in, and she pays very generously. She just wants someone kind around the house.”

Elise had told me about Mrs.

Chen before, but I wasn’t ready then. I was still too broken.

Now I was ready.

That evening, I sat down with my parents at the dinner table after Madison and Ryan had retreated to their room with their meal trays.

“I’ve found a job,” I said calmly. “It comes with a place to live.

I’ll be moving out next week.”

They were surprised.

“Sweetheart, we don’t want you to go,” my mom said. “You’re still healing from everything with Tom. You don’t have to rush into anything.”

“I’ll be okay, Mom,” I replied.

“I can’t stay here and be disrespected every day. It’s not good for any of us.”

Madison, who had apparently been listening from the top of the stairs, came bouncing down with a huge smile on her face.

“Guess that means I get the bigger bathroom now!” she chirped, already planning how to rearrange the house to her liking.

I didn’t respond. There was nothing left to say.

I packed my things quietly over the next few days.

I didn’t slam doors or throw tantrums or make dramatic speeches.

I cooked one last dinner for my parents, just the way they liked it, and then I left.

Three weeks later, I heard through Mom that Madison and Ryan had to leave the house, too. Apparently, my parents finally saw Madison’s true colors when she threw a complete tantrum over a slightly cold omelet and called my mom a “useless old woman” who didn’t know how to cook properly.

Dad asked them both to leave the next day.

I wasn’t there to see it, but Mom called me with tears in her voice.

“We’re so sorry, honey,” she said. “We should have seen what was happening sooner.

We should have protected you.”

I forgave them because I understood. Sometimes, love makes us blind to the people we care about most.

And for the first time in months, sitting in Mrs. Chen’s cozy kitchen with a cup of tea and a job that made me feel useful again, I felt like I could finally breathe.

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