My sister sold me her old car for next to nothing. It was barely drivable—flat tires, a rusted hood, and an interior that smelled like it had been left untouched for years. She handed me the keys with exaggerated pride, acting as if she’d given me a priceless gift instead of a broken-down heap.
But I knew cars, and I needed one to get to university. Over the next several months, I poured nearly every weekend into repairing it, spending over $5,000 on tires, paint, engine work, and cleaning up the interior. When the engine finally started smoothly, the car felt less like a vehicle and more like a personal triumph.
Then one morning, as I was heading out for class, she stormed into my apartment. “I need the car back,” she declared. “My husband’s car is out of commission. And technically, it’s still mine—I never transferred the title.”
I was stunned. She had sold it to me, watched me pour money and effort into it, and now expected it back? My parents sided with her, claiming I was overreacting.
I considered calling the police, but instead I came up with a better plan. I gathered all the receipts and invoices documenting the $5,000 I’d spent on repairs and handed them to her calmly.
“You can have the car,” I said, “if you reimburse me for the repairs.”
Her eyes widened. “I’m not paying that!” she snapped.
“Then the car stays with me,” I replied.
In the end, her husband fixed his own car—and mine? It still gets me to university every day, fully restored, reliable, and completely mine.
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