Just sign the papers, Grandma. The house is basically already mine — you can

I set the groceries down slowly. Cans of tomato soup clinked like a countdown. “Tyler,” I said, keeping my voice level, “step away from her.” He laughed. “Relax, Florence Nightingale. The adults are talking. Grandma agreed — didn’t you, Grandma?” Rosa’s hands were trembling around the pen. She looked at me with those wet, apologetic eyes, and my heart cracked clean down the middle. “He said the bank is taking it,” she whispered in Spanish. “He said you told him to handle it.” I knelt beside her chair and squeezed her hand. “Abuela, nobody is taking anything. Put the pen down.” Tyler’s smile finally slipped. “You can’t prove I pressured her. It’s her signature, her choice—” “Actually,” came a calm voice from the hallway, “we can.” Tyler went the color of skim milk. My friend Denise, an elder-law attorney, stepped into the light, followed by two uniformed officers. Behind them, the little blinking red dot of the nanny cam I’d installed above the china cabinet three months ago after Grandma mentioned Tyler had been “visiting more.” Denise held up her phone. “We have four separate recordings of you telling your grandmother her home was in foreclosure. It isn’t. We have you forging her name on a power of attorney last Tuesday. That’s a felony in this state.” I stood up. “Oh, and the house? She transferred it into an irrevocable trust six weeks ago. I’m the trustee. You were trying to steal something that legally isn’t hers to give anymore.” Tyler stammered about a misunderstanding as the officers walked him toward the door. Grandma Rosa gripped my wrist. “Mija, I was so scared.” I kissed the top of her silver head. “I know, Abuela. That’s why I never stopped watching.” The tomato soup was cold by the time we sat down to eat, but she laughed for the first time in weeks — and that sound was worth every double shift I’d ever worked.

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