The Ceramic Rooster On The Kitchen Table Exposed The Deed Diana Tried To Hide-QuynhTranJP

My son stopped breathing on the other end of the phone.

Not in the dramatic way people describe when they want sympathy. I heard the tiny break in him through the line: one sharp inhale, then nothing but the soft scrape of his hand over his mouth.

I sat at my sister Helen’s kitchen table in Michigan with the legal folder open beside my left elbow. The tea had gone lukewarm. The mug was white porcelain with a blue chip near the rim, and my thumb kept finding that chipped spot like it needed something rough to hold on to.

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Outside Helen’s window, wet leaves stuck to the glass. Her old refrigerator hummed. The house smelled like cinnamon toast, furniture polish, and the wool blanket she had wrapped around my shoulders without making a production of it.

“Which part?” I asked again.

My son swallowed loudly.

“The deed,” he said. “I didn’t know about the deed.”

I looked down at Ms. Herrera’s notes. Quitclaim deed prepared. No signature. No transfer. Possible coercion attempt.

“That is a very specific thing not to know about,” I said.

He did not answer right away.

Behind him, faint and sharp, Diana’s voice cut through the distance.

“Do not say anything else until we talk to someone.”

My son covered the phone. Fabric rustled. A chair scraped. Then his voice returned, lower.

“Mom, please. Can we meet?”

“No.”

The word came out plain. Not angry. Not soft.

He breathed again, shaky this time.

“I need you to understand—”

“No,” I said. “You need to understand. From this moment forward, anything about the house goes through Ms. Herrera. Anything about your children goes through you and me only. And anything about Diana does not come through me at all.”

There was another long pause.

Then he said, “Are you safe?”

That question put my hand flat against the table.

It was the first one he should have asked.

“Yes,” I said. “I am with Helen.”

He made a sound that almost became my little boy’s cry, the one he used to make when he fell off his bike and tried not to let Walter see tears. I closed my eyes, opened them again, and kept my spine against the chair.

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