The Deputy at My Mother’s Door Didn’t Ask About the Money First — He Asked for Greg-eirian

The second ring was louder than the first.

It bounced off the glass cabinet, off the paused laptop screen, off the ceiling fan that still clicked every third turn like nothing in that house had changed. Lemon polish sat sharp in the air. Burned coffee had gone cold in the pot. Eli’s crushed juice box made a soft crackle under his fingers when he tightened his grip.

Through the frosted glass, the deputy’s outline shifted once. Folder in one hand. Other hand resting near his belt. Greg’s breathing got shallow enough to hear.

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Nobody moved, so I did.

My boots sounded flat on Mom’s hardwood floor. The brass lock turned. Cold air slipped through the opening and brushed the sweat at the back of my neck.

Deputy Collins stood there in a tan uniform, hat tucked under one arm, his face set in that careful, neighborly way officers wear when they already know the room is going to get worse before it gets better.

He looked past me once and saw the child, the laptop, the frozen frame.

Then he asked, very quietly,

“Is Greg Mercer here?”

Not, What happened?

Not, Who took the money?

Greg made a sound behind me, something between a cough and a swallowed curse.

Deputy Collins stepped inside, shut the door behind him, and let his eyes adjust to the room.

My mother’s house had always been too small for conflict. Dad built it in 1994 when Hannah was twelve and I was ten, a square little place in Columbus with narrow hallways, heavy trim, and a safe hidden in the bedroom closet after our neighborhood had a string of break-ins. He used to keep cash in cream envelopes for roof repairs, furnace work, taxes, things he called “real life money.” He trusted paper more than banks.

Back then, Sunday dinners meant baked ham, frosted cake from Kroger, and Dad tapping the weather with one finger on the kitchen radio. Hannah was the loud one, all bright lipstick and easy laughter. I was the quiet one who washed dishes before anyone asked. Mom liked to say Hannah lit up a room and I steadied it.

For a long time, that sounded almost like praise.

After Dad died, the house lost its center. Mom started misplacing bills. Hannah started visiting more. Then Greg started staying over. At first it was one weekend because their condo had “plumbing issues.” Then two weeks because his office was “between leases.” By Christmas, half his polo shirts were in Mom’s guest room closet and three banker boxes labeled MERCER & LOWE CONSULTING were stacked beside her dryer.

He brought pastries on Sundays. Fixed one loose stair. Called Mom “Miss Carol” in that polished voice that made older women trust him. He also started asking little questions men like him ask when they’re mapping a place.

Where do you keep the spare key?

Do you still use cash for the contractors?

What’s the new alarm code?

The first envelope that shifted was in February. Mom blamed herself. The second time, she cried on the phone and said maybe her mind was slipping. I drove over that night with a ladder, a tiny motion camera, and a screwdriver. Mounted the camera above the linen closet across from her bedroom. Tested it twice. Showed her how it worked.

A week later, she forgot it was there.

I didn’t.

Behind me, Deputy Collins set his folder on the table beside the pillbox Hannah had knocked over.

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