7 juillet 2026

My grandson came by and asked why I was staying in a small room out back.

My grandson stopped by one afternoon and asked why I was living in a small back room. My son cut in quickly: “The house belongs to my wife now. If my mom complains, she’s out.” He had no idea who my grandson had become, and what followed changed everything.
He arrived on a rainy Thursday in October, carrying a small duffel bag and wearing a navy coat that looked far too expensive for the neighborhood I lived in.

I was peeling potatoes in the narrow kitchenette attached to the back room my son referred to as my “space.” In reality, it had once been a storage addition behind the garage. The ceiling was low, the walls thin, and when it rained, I could hear every drop tapping against the metal gutter outside my window. There was just enough room for a single bed, a dresser, a hot plate, and a chair with one uneven leg. My son, Brian, told people I liked the privacy.

I had just wiped my hands on a dish towel when I heard the back gate creak open.

“Grandma?”

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