My Cousin Stole 14 Months of My Mother’s Money — Then the Deputy Opened the Deed on My Hood-thuyhien

The evening air had gone sharp by the time Deputy Evelyn Shaw laid the yellow folder flat on the hood of my truck. Dust from the driveway settled over the black paint. The broken padlock sat beside the survey map, still warm from my hand. My mother’s breathing rasped behind me from the porch swing where the EMT had settled her with a blanket over her knees. Deputy Shaw pressed one palm to the paper so the wind would not lift it, looked up at my mother, and asked again, slow enough for every person in that yard to hear.

‘Mrs. Mendoza, did you ever sell this property?’

My mother swallowed once. Her throat moved like it hurt.

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‘No.’

Grace made a sound in the back of her mouth, half laugh, half protest.

‘Aunt Cathy gets confused at night.’

Deputy Shaw did not even turn her head.

‘Good,’ she said into the radio clipped to her vest. ‘Run the parcel number.’

The dog eased itself under the swing and put its chin across my boot. Somewhere beyond the collard patch, a screen door banged in the wind and stayed open.

When my mother was forty-three, Grace was twelve and already carrying the shut-down look of a child who had learned not to expect much from anybody. My aunt Lena died in a wreck outside Roma, and for two nights nobody knew where Grace should go. My mother drove over in her old Ford, brought the girl home in the passenger seat with a grocery bag full of clothes and a school picture tucked into her Bible. That was how Grace came to our table.

My mother never split food by blood. If there were four biscuits, she broke one in half. If there was one blanket left in winter, she warmed it by the stove first and took the chair near the draft for herself. Grace slept in my room until my mother found enough money to buy a used daybed from a church rummage sale. She sat at the same kitchen table where I did, learned to shell peas on the same porch, and wore my mother’s old denim jacket to school because my mother stitched the elbow before dawn and said nobody needed to know it had belonged to anyone else.

Later, when Grace married Thomas Holloway, my mother gave them the back corner of the land near the mesquite tree. She did not deed it to them. She pointed with her hoe and said, ‘Build there if you want. Just don’t crowd my tomatoes.’ Thomas laughed like he had won something big. Grace cried into my mother’s shoulder. I remember my mother coming inside that night with dirt on her ankles, opening the freezer, and saying, almost shyly, ‘It’ll be nice not eating supper alone if you’re gone one day.’

That was the kind of woman she was. She saved twist ties in a coffee can, fed strays before herself, and believed that if you gave people steady kindness, most of them would stand up straight inside it.

When I left for Texas work at twenty-two, she stood in the doorway with one hand on the frame and told me not to come back small just because the town expected it. Every Friday after that, my phone lit up with her number. Sometimes she asked about brakes, sometimes about weather, sometimes whether I was eating anything green. She never asked for much. A new water heater once. Fence wire another time. Then nothing for a long stretch but seed money, feed money, and little things a son can send without calling it charity.

Seeing her that night on the swing with the blanket slipping off one shoulder pulled something tight behind my ribs until my left hand would not unclench. Her wrists were thinner than the neck of a soda bottle. On the right one, half hidden under the blanket edge, was a dark band where metal had rubbed the skin raw. A fly kept landing on the porch rail beside her water glass. I killed it with the folded tax notice and felt the paper go soft in my sweating hand.

Guilt works like heat in a closed truck cab. It creeps up before you notice it, then suddenly there is no cool place left to put your body.

For fourteen months I had sent $1,850 at a time because Grace said my mother was scared of the road. Fourteen months. Fourteen chances to ask for a picture, a receipt, a bank screenshot, one proof bigger than blood. Instead I worked longer hours, added a second lift to the shop in McAllen, bought that truck because I wanted to bring my mother home in something steady, and believed that family still meant what it meant when I was ten.

On the porch swing, my mother held the cup with both hands and tipped her face toward me.

‘You came fast,’ she said.

‘I should have come sooner.’

She pressed her mouth flat and looked away toward the garden like she would not help me with that sentence.

Deputy Shaw asked for the medicine bottles. I brought the grocery sack I had found under the cot. Two had my mother’s name. One did not. The third bottle was for tramadol prescribed to a dead man—Grace’s father, according to the label, filled eight months earlier. The EMT, a square-built woman named Carla Ruiz, looked at the bottle, then at my mother.

‘Were these given to you?’

My mother nodded once.

‘At night mostly,’ she whispered. ‘When papers came.’

The yard changed shape after that.

Deputy Shaw’s voice got quieter. Grace’s got faster.

Thomas started pacing the dirt strip between the porch and the truck, rolling his keys hard enough around one finger that the metal clicked and clicked like something counting down.

There was more under the cot than the yellow folder. When Carla and I lifted the mattress to straighten the sheet, a school notebook slid out and hit the floor open. My mother had written in it with a blue pen that sometimes skipped. Dates. Amounts. Which envelopes arrived. Which ones Grace took. Which nights Thomas locked the outside chain. Which pills made her legs feel like wet rope. On one page, in letters that shook harder than the others, she had written: She said sign or no supper.

Tucked into the back cover was a folded receipt from the feed store. Thirty-two hens sold for cash. Another from a pawn shop in Rio Grande City for my father’s silver belt buckle. Another from a propane refill I had already paid for.

Grace saw Deputy Shaw reading and stepped forward.

‘Aunt Cathy writes all kinds of things when she’s upset.’

My mother lifted her head.

‘You took my chickens first,’ she said. ‘Then my phone.’

The silence that followed was not empty. It had weight. Even Thomas stopped moving.

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