The Visit (What He Saw)
My grandson came to visit on a wet Thursday afternoon in October, carrying a small duffel bag and wearing a navy coat that looked too expensive for the neighborhood I lived in.
I was peeling potatoes in the narrow kitchenette attached to the back room my son called my "space." In truth, it had once been a storage addition behind the garage. The ceiling was low, the walls were thin, and when it rained, I could hear every drop tap against the metal gutter outside my window. There was room for a single bed, one dresser, a hot plate, and a chair with one uneven leg. My son, Brian, told people I liked the privacy.
I was still wiping my hands on a dish towel when I heard the back gate creak open.
"Grandma?"
I turned so fast I nearly dropped the knife. "Ethan?"
He crossed the little concrete strip in three long steps and hugged me hard, harder than he had when he was sixteen and all elbows and impatience. He was twenty-eight now, broad-shouldered, clean-shaven, calmer in the face. I had not seen him in almost three years, not since he moved to Chicago after law school. He called, he sent birthday flowers, he apologized for being busy. But seeing him standing in my doorway felt like sunlight entering a room that had forgotten what morning looked like.
"I wanted to surprise you," he said.
"Well, you did."
He stepped inside, and I saw his eyes move over everything—the stained curtain, the medicine bottles lined on the windowsill, the portable heater by the bed. His smile faded.
"Why are you out here?" he asked quietly.
Before I could answer, the kitchen door of the main house banged open. Brian strode across the yard with his jaw already tight, his wife Melissa behind him with her folded arms and that permanent look of insult she wore whenever life did not arrange itself around her comfort.
"There you are," Brian said to Ethan, too brightly. "We thought you'd come to the front."
Ethan didn't take his eyes off me. "Grandma lives here?"
Brian laughed once. "It's a guest suite."
Melissa said, "She likes having her own place."
I opened my mouth to smooth it over, the way I always did, but Ethan beat me to it.
"This is a converted storage room."
Brian's expression hardened. "Watch your tone."
Ethan turned then, fully. "Why is my grandmother living behind the house?"
The answer came out of Brian like it had been waiting years for a witness.
"Because the house belongs to my wife now," he snapped. "And if my mom complains, she's out for good."

