At 69, after signing my $312,000 house over to my son-felicia

The county officer’s envelope made a sound when Daniel unfolded it.

A small, dry crackle.

For some reason, that was what I remembered most. Not Rebecca’s sharp inhale. Not Sarah frozen near the staircase. Not the way my son’s mouth opened and closed without finding a sentence.

The paper.

The sound of it.

Có thể là hình ảnh về văn bản

After all the years I had signed forms without reading them twice because Daniel said, “Mom, it’s just easier this way,” now the paper was speaking for me.

Daniel stared at the title.

PETITION TO SET ASIDE DEED FOR UNDUE INFLUENCE.

Rebecca moved first.

She crossed the foyer quickly, heels clicking against the wood floors Samuel and I had saved nine years to install.

“What is this?” she demanded.

The county officer did not look at her.

“Are you Daniel Robert Miller?”

Daniel swallowed. “Yes.”

“You’ve been served.”

Rebecca snatched for the envelope, but Daniel pulled it back.

“Don’t,” he said.

That was the first time I’d heard him tell her no in months.

It did not comfort me.

It came too late to count as protection.

The officer handed him a second set of papers. “Temporary occupancy and financial restraint notice. Read all pages carefully. Hearing date is listed on page four.”

Rebecca’s face changed.

“Occupancy?”

The officer finally looked at her. “Ma’am, any questions should be directed to the court or your attorney.”

Then he turned to me.

Not warmly. Not dramatically.

Just respectfully.

“Mrs. Miller.”

I nodded.

“Thank you.”

He left at 4:16 p.m.

The door clicked shut behind him, and for the first time since Daniel and Rebecca had moved in, the house was silent in a way that did not belong to them.

Daniel looked at me.

“Mom,” he said.

One word.

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