Daily Chaos

She Gave My Parking Spot to Her Guest

My roommate gave my parking spot away for the night... then said it was just concrete.

Fictional case Interactive webtoon 8 panels

This is an original fictional interactive webtoon case about daily chaos. Read the story, inspect the details, pick a side, and see the split.

Nora checks a generic apartment parking spot before leaving for work.
I pay for that spot every month.
Gut pick

Pick your first lean.

One tap now. You can flip after the story.

Optional. Final pick comes later.
Tension meter
Gut check
Panel 1 / 8
Move the carstory pull
Guest can staystory pull
Parking rulestory pull

First take: No first take yet. Story pressure only.

Receipt layer
3 receipts waiting.
Tessa greets a fictional guest with an overnight bag beside a generic apartment parking lot.
Tessa had a guest coming over.
A parking fob, wet keys, raincoat sleeve, and guest bag sit in a generic apartment entry scene.
The favor used my access.
Nora stands in heavy rain with bags while an unfamiliar car occupies a generic parking spot.
Then I came home early.
Nora and Tessa talk in a generic apartment doorway while Nora stands soaked from rain.
Tessa said it was one night.
Nora walks in rain with wet bags along a generic residential sidewalk at night.
I parked blocks away.
Nora, Tessa, and a friend discuss a parking conflict in a generic apartment living room.
Everyone had a different take.
Nora looks at a blank parking fob and keys on a generic apartment kitchen counter.
Next time, what is the rule?
Evidence

Check the details.

Assigned spot

Nora pays for the apartment parking spot and relies on it after late shifts.

Guest favor

Tessa offered the spot to her visiting cousin without asking Nora first.

Rainy arrival

Nora came home early in heavy rain with bags and had to park several blocks away.

Pick your side

Should Nora ask for the spot back, let the guest stay, or make a house rule?

Three takes enter the chat.Claim a lane before the split shows.
Three takes are live. Tap a lane.
Open the receipts
  1. I pay for that spot every month.
    Nora kept the assigned spot because late shifts meant coming home tired, loaded down, and usually in the dark.
    This spot is part of my rent.
    Nora: This spot is part of my rent.
  2. Tessa had a guest coming over.
    Her cousin had never visited the building before. Tessa wanted the night to feel easy.
    You can use the close spot.
    Tessa: You can use the close spot.
  3. The favor used my access.
    The spot, the fob, and the late-night walk were all part of why Nora kept paying for it.
  4. Then I came home early.
    Nora turned into the lot with groceries, a work tote, and one thought: finally, home.
    Whose car is in my spot?
    Nora: Whose car is in my spot?
  5. Tessa said it was one night.
    Tessa said her cousin was nervous about street parking and Nora usually got home later.
    I thought you would be home later.
    Tessa: I thought you would be home later.
  6. I parked blocks away.
    By the time Nora made it upstairs, the groceries were damp and the argument already felt bigger than one parking space.
    It stopped being small when I carried it.
    Nora: It stopped being small when I carried it.
  7. Everyone had a different take.
    One friend said guest comfort matters. Another said paid boundaries should not be borrowed in silence.
    It was one night.
    It was still mine.
    Tessa: It was one night. / Nora: It was still mine.
  8. Next time, what is the rule?
    Should Nora ask for the car moved, let the guest keep the spot for one night, or make the parking rule clear before anyone else visits?
    Ask me before you offer it.
    Nora: Ask me before you offer it.
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