The Talking Dog My Sister Dumped Exposed The House She Tried To Steal-Ginny

Dennis’s paw was still beside my knee when the blue folder opened.

For one second, all I heard was the refrigerator humming in Mom’s kitchen.

Marla stood across from me with her hand half-raised, as if she could still snatch the folder and make the whole thing disappear.

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She had always believed speed was power.

She spoke fast.

She signed fast.

She packed grief into trash bags fast, because if nobody had time to think, nobody had time to stop her.

But Dennis had never moved that way.

Dennis listened first.

Then he spoke.

His nose touched the edge of the folder, and that strange low sound rolled from his chest again.

“Grrr-ace.”

I did not know whether to laugh, sob, or run.

My name sat at the top of the first page in Mom’s careful handwriting.

Dear Grace, it said, if Dennis brought you to this drawer, trust him before you trust anyone who tells you that love has made you foolish.

Marla made a sound that was almost a laugh.

“Mom was sick,” she said.

The shelter worker, Lisa, stepped in from the back door and answered before I could.

“This letter is dated and witnessed,” she said.

Marla turned on her.

“You have no right to be here.”

Lisa held up both hands.

She was a small woman with shelter hair, tired eyes, and a raincoat covered in dog fur.

She did not look powerful.

She looked honest, which scared Marla more.

“You surrendered this dog under a false contact number,” Lisa said.

Marla’s mouth tightened.

That was the first crack.

I had spent two weeks thinking Dennis was a miracle I had stumbled into.

I had not understood that Mom had left a trail.

The letter said Mom knew Marla had been pressuring her to sign the house away.

It said Marla had called the little white house a wasted asset, as if a home could be weighed like junk metal.

It said Mom had refused.

It said if anything happened to her documents, I should listen to Dennis.

Not because Dennis was magic.

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