I stepped inside. The floorboards creaked, and Miranda’s head snapped up. “Oh, look. The little bedpan princess finally showed up. Wait your turn, sweetheart — the adults are talking.” Grandma’s eyes lifted to mine, glassy with fear. I walked past Miranda without a word, knelt beside Grandma’s chair, and gently closed the folder. “Grandma, you don’t have to sign anything tonight.” Miranda laughed — that brittle, country-club laugh. “She’s already agreed. Haven’t you, Mother? The estate transfers to me, and we put her somewhere she can be properly cared for. Elena, you’re a nurse, not family. Know your place.” I stood up slowly. From the inside pocket of my scrubs, I pulled a folded envelope, worn soft at the edges. I placed it on the desk in front of the lawyer. He opened it, read two lines, and went pale. “Ms. Ashcroft,” he said carefully to Miranda, “this is a durable power of attorney and an updated will, notarized fourteen months ago. Executed by Rosalind Ashcroft while of sound mind, with two physicians as witnesses. Elena is her legal medical proxy — and her sole heir.” The room stopped breathing. Miranda’s smile cracked like cheap porcelain. “That’s — that’s forged —” “It’s filed with the county,” the lawyer said quietly. “I filed it myself.” I turned to Miranda. “Grandma called me the week after your last visit. You told her she smelled like death and asked when the house would be yours. She remembered every word.” Miranda lunged for the folder; I slid it away. “You can leave now. Security at the gate has your name — you’re not to return.” “You can’t do this to me! I’m her daughter!” Grandma finally spoke, her voice paper-thin but steady. “You stopped being my daughter the day you started counting my breaths.” Miranda stumbled out into the rain, heels sinking into the gravel. I sat beside Grandma and held her hand until it stopped shaking. “Sunday soup tomorrow?” she whispered. “Sunday soup,” I promised. Outside, the Range Rover’s taillights disappeared down the drive — for the very last time.
Related Posts
Hand over the bakery keys, Grandma, before you embarrass yourself any further. Nobody buys
I poured myself a cup of coffee, slow and deliberate, while Brielle’s friends filmed. ‘Sweetheart,’ I said, ‘before you redecorate, you should meet someone.’ The […]
Sign the papers, Grandma, or we put you in the cheapest home we can
Brett tapped the signature line. “Come on. The farm, the lake house, the accounts. Sign.” Grandma’s voice was thin. “Hannah said I shouldn’t sign anything […]
Sign the house over to me by sunset, or I’ll have your disabled brother
I picked up the pen. I turned it over in my fingers. Then I set it down beside the document, untouched. “Caroline,” I said softly, […]





