I left for a month-long work trip, trusting my neighbor Lisa to watch my house — just as she’d done for years. She smiled as I handed her the keys, promising to take care of the plants and mail. We hugged, wished each other luck, and I flew off thinking nothing would go wrong. But life had other plans.
Just four days in, the client pulled the plug on my pitch. Hours later, I was fired. With nothing keeping me away, I booked the next flight home. Pulling into my driveway three weeks early, I froze — a strange minivan was parked there.
Peeking through the window, I saw a family laughing around my kitchen table. Shocked, I barged in — only to be told they had rented the house online. Stunned, I went straight to Lisa. Her face fell when she saw me. “I didn’t think you’d come back early,” she confessed.
Turns out she’d been renting my house for a year, pocketing the money. I didn’t press charges — I just demanded every cent she made. Our friendship ended, but I rebuilt from the wreckage. I used the money to downsize, start fresh, and eventually rent the house myself — the right way. And Lisa? She watches from across the street. I don’t wave. But I’m free.