I’m a single mom of three wonderful daughters: Clara (10), Mia (7), and Grace (5). We rent a small but cozy little house. It’s not perfect, but it’s ours, and my girls love it.
Last week, I got a call from our landlord, Mr. Harris.
**Mr. Harris:** *“You need to move out for a week. My brother’s visiting, and he needs the house. I don’t care where you go. Not my problem.”*
**Me:** *“But this is our home! We have a lease—”*
**Mr. Harris:** *“Don’t start with that lease nonsense. I could’ve kicked you out last time you were late on rent. Be gone by Friday… or maybe you won’t come back at all.”*
I was stunned. He didn’t care that I had no family nearby, nowhere to go, and no money for a hotel. He knew I couldn’t risk losing the house. So I packed up the girls, and we left.
We ended up in a dingy hostel across town. It was noisy, cramped, and my daughters hated it. Little Grace cried herself to sleep every night because we’d had to leave her stuffed bunny—Mr. Whiskers—back at home.
By the fourth night, I couldn’t stand it anymore. I decided to go back and grab her bunny.
I knocked on the door, my heart pounding, unsure what I would find.
The door creaked open—
And I gasped.
My landlord had lied.
The door creaked open—
And I gasped.
My landlord had lied.
There was no “brother.” No family visit.
Standing in the living room were two strangers I had never seen before—suitcases stacked in the hallway, a couple unpacking groceries on *my* kitchen counter.
“This is our rental,” the man said casually, like I was the intruder.
My stomach twisted. *Our* rental?
I demanded answers. Within minutes, Mr. Harris himself appeared, smirking.
*”Surprised? I rented it out on Airbnb. Twice the money. You and your kids? Just temporary tenants. You’ll figure something out.”*
I couldn’t breathe. My girls crying in that filthy hostel, clutching each other at night—while strangers lived comfortably in our home because of his greed.
But he underestimated me.
I pulled my phone from my pocket and hit play. A recording of his threatening call filled the room:
*“Be gone by Friday, or maybe you won’t come back at all.”*
The strangers looked horrified. One of them whispered, *“You didn’t tell us this place was still occupied.”*
Mr. Harris’s smirk faltered.
The next morning, I was in court, lease in hand, recording as evidence. The judge didn’t need convincing—Mr. Harris was slapped with fines, ordered to pay damages, and warned that one more stunt like this could cost him his license.
By evening, I was back in my house with Clara, Mia, and Grace. Grace clutched Mr. Whiskers tight, smiling through her tears.
And as I tucked them in that night, I promised myself:
No one would ever take our home away from us again.
Because sometimes the strongest thing a single mom can do—
Is refuse to be bullied.