The Attorney At My Door Had The Deed My Mother Thought She Buried-yumihong

The porch camera filled my phone screen with three faces: my attorney, Mr. Halpern, standing under the white entry light, and two officers behind him with their hands resting calmly near their belts.

The sealed folder under Mr. Halpern’s arm was the same dark blue color as the one I had signed in Houston before my last trip to the oil fields.

Valerie saw it on the kitchen monitor and stopped breathing through her mouth.

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Carmen whispered, “No.”

That one word told me more than any confession would have.

I handed my phone to Lira and bent down to Leo. His fingers were still locked around my pant leg. The skin on his knuckles looked dry. A grain of rice stuck to the corner of his mouth.

“Come here, buddy.”

He hesitated before stepping into my arms, like even being held needed permission in that house.

I lifted him, felt how light he was, and turned to Lira.

“Get your pillow and the bags. Nothing else.”

She did not ask why. She stood too fast, swayed once, then pressed her palm against the sink. The smell of grease and sour starch clung to the air. Party music thumped through the wall like the house had two hearts beating in different directions.

Carmen moved toward the hallway.

I stepped in front of her.

“Don’t.”

She tried to arrange her face into the soft version I remembered from childhood, the version that packed my lunch and kissed my forehead before school.

“Son,” she said, almost smiling, “your wife is confused. Valerie and I were helping manage things while you were gone. You know how Lira is with money.”

Lira’s head lowered.

That small motion nearly broke the last piece of restraint I had.

Valerie found her voice first.

“She’s dramatic. She always has been. We gave her a place to stay. We gave the boy food.”

Leo tightened against my chest.

I looked at the tray in Valerie’s hands. Golden chicken, glossy skin, rosemary sprigs, lemon wedges, the kind of food my son had smelled through a closed door.

“You gave him garbage.”

Valerie’s nostrils flared.

“You have no idea what she did while you were gone.”

Mr. Halpern knocked again, harder this time. The front doorbell chimed through the mansion, bright and expensive. From the living room, the laughter thinned. A man asked, “Carmen, are we expecting someone?”

My mother’s eyes jumped toward the sound.

She cared more about the guests hearing than about Leo’s empty stomach.

I took the house key from my pocket and held it out to Lira.

“Open the front door.”

Carmen’s hand shot out.

“No. Not in front of everyone.”

I looked at her fingers wrapped around my wife’s wrist.

“Let go.”

The officers could not see us yet. The guests could not see us yet. But Carmen did. She saw my face, my phone, my son in my arms, and the black screen of the banking app still glowing on the counter.

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