My Niece took My Daughter’s New Tablet And Said, “Auntie Says I Can Have Whatever I Want.” My…
The Birthday Present That Changed Everything
My niece took my daughter’s new tablet and said, “Auntie says I can have whatever I want.”
My sister nodded. “She’s right, your kid has too much anyway.”
I smiled, took the tablet back, and whispered to my daughter, “Pack your things.”
That night I sold the lake house they’d been using for free family weekends. When the new owners changed the locks, the moment my niece’s hand closed around my daughter’s brand new tablet, I knew something fundamental had just broken in my family.
“Auntie says I can have whatever I want,” Maya announced, clutching the device like it was already hers.
She was 8 years old and so confident in her entitlement that she didn’t even look at me for permission. My daughter Emma, also eight, stood frozen watching her cousin walk away with the birthday present she’d opened 30 minutes ago.
I looked at my sister Jessica, waiting for her to correct this. I was waiting for her to do her job as a parent and teach her daughter about boundaries and other people’s property.
Instead, Jessica shrugged. “She’s right, your kid has too much anyway. Maya never gets nice things like this. It’s only fair.”
The living room went silent. My wife Clare’s hand found mine.
Emma’s eyes filled with tears. She was too well trained not to cry.
I smiled the kind of smile I perfected in 12 years of police work. The smile that meant I was done negotiating.
I walked over to Maya, gently took the tablet back, and handed it to Emma. “Baby, go upstairs and pack your things. We’re leaving.”
Then I turned to Jessica. “And you need to pack too. All of you. You have 30 days to get out of the lake house.”
Jessica laughed. “What are you talking about? That’s the family house. We’ve been using it for years.”
“It’s my house. I own it. And as of right now, you’re no longer welcome there.”
“You can’t!” She said.
“I can, and I am.”
That night I called a real estate agent. Two weeks later the lake house sold for $340,000.
When the new owners changed the locks and found my sister’s family still there refusing to leave, the police were called. I was working that shift; I didn’t volunteer to take the call, but I didn’t refuse it either.
My name is Simon Reeves. I’m 39 years old and I’ve been a police officer for 12 years in a small town in upstate New York.
Most people see the uniform and think they know who I am. What they don’t know is that before I became a cop, I inherited a lake house from my grandparents worth about $340,000.
It was a beautiful three-bedroom property on Lake George with a private dock and mountain views. For 8 years I let my sister Jessica and her family use it for free family weekends.
They’d invite relatives, throw parties, and treat it like their personal vacation home. I never asked for rent or utilities; I just wanted my family to enjoy something our grandparents had loved.
I never imagined that generosity would turn my sister into someone who thought she was entitled to my daughter’s birthday presents. Let me back up to how we got to Emma’s birthday party, because understanding my sister requires understanding how we grew up.
Jessica is 3 years older than me. Growing up she was always the favorite, not in an obvious cruel way, just in that subtle way where mom and dad’s faces lit up when she walked in the room.
Her achievements were celebrated; mine were expected. Her problems were tragedies; mine were character-building opportunities.
When Jessica got pregnant at 19 with Maya, our parents rallied around her. They set her up in an apartment, helped with child care, and paid for her to finish community college.
She married Maya’s father Trevor when Maya was two. He was a nice guy but not exactly ambitious; he worked in retail management and made about $45,000 a year.
They struggled financially but never seemed to think it was their responsibility to fix that. I went a different route, joined the police academy at 21, and married Clare at 24.
We bought a modest house in town at 26. When Emma was born a year later, Clare and I had already planned everything carefully: budget, savings, college fund.
We lived within our means. My grandparents died when I was 31, both within six months of each other.
They left the lake house to me specifically, not to both Jessica and me, just to me. My grandfather had always liked that I went into public service and said it reminded him of his years as a volunteer firefighter.
The will was clear and notarized. Jessica wasn’t happy, but she didn’t contest it.
Instead she asked if her family could use it sometimes for family time. I said yes; of course I said yes.
It was a big house and we only used it a few weekends a year, so why let it sit empty? That was 8 years ago.
What started as sometimes became most weekends. What started as asking permission became informing me they’d be there.
Jessica started calling it the family lake house instead of Simon’s house we borrow sometimes. She redecorated, changed furniture, painted walls, and installed a big screen TV.
When I mentioned that I hadn’t approved these changes, she said, “Oh come on, don’t be like that. We’re making it nicer for everyone.”
The bills piled up: utilities, property tax, maintenance, dock repairs. I paid for everything.
Jessica never offered to contribute. When I brought it up once, she said, “You make good money as a cop. We’re struggling. I thought family helped family.”
There’s that phrase: family helps family. It’s a beautiful sentiment until it becomes a weapon.
Clare noticed before I did how much my sister was taking advantage. “She’s using you,” Clare said after Jessica’s fourth weekend in a row at the lake house.
“She’s treating your property like hers and you’re letting her.” “She’s family,” I said.
“The house would just sit empty otherwise.” “It’s your house,” Clare insisted.
“You inherited it, you pay for it, you should be able to use it whenever you want without checking if your sister is there first.” She was right, but I didn’t want to see it.
I didn’t want to be the guy who pulled the rug out from under his sister. I didn’t want family drama, so I let it continue.
And every year Jessica became more entitled, more certain that the lake house was hers by right of use if not by ownership. Then came Emma’s 8th birthday party.
Clare and I had saved for months to buy Emma the tablet she wanted. It was not the most expensive model, as we’re not rich, but a nice one for $100.
It had educational apps preloaded, parental controls set up, and a purple case she’d picked out herself. We threw the party at our house with 20 kids from Emma’s class, pizza, cake, and backyard games.
Jessica’s family came: Maya, Trevor, and Jessica. I was actually happy to see them; despite everything with the lake house, I still loved my sister.
I wanted Emma’s birthday to be perfect. Maya saw Emma open the tablet and her face changed; she was not happy for her cousin, just calculating and wanting.\
