For as long as I can remember, we were a trio—me, my older brother Kyle, and Grandma Isabel, the unofficial mayor of our neighborhood with her crooked porch swing and bowl of peppermint candy that never seemed to empty. Everyone called her “Miss Isabel,” like she’d earned the title through kindness alone.
After our parents died in a car crash, she raised us. I was just two, Kyle nine. He never quite came back from that loss. Grandma used to say anger made a home in him early, like a vine curling through his chest. He was loud, reckless, slammed doors like they owed him something. I was the opposite. I did my homework, kept my voice down, and helped wherever I could.
By sixteen, I was working after school to help with bills. Grandma worked part-time at the library despite arthritis that made every step a quiet wince. Kyle? He was twenty-three, jobless, bitter, and completely ungrateful. Still, Grandma always believed he’d find his way.
At eighteen, I got an IT assistant job six hours away. Not a dream gig, but it paid well, and I could send money home. Grandma encouraged me with a kiss to my cheek and one last reminder: “Your life matters too.”
For two years, I sent money back, enough to fix the roof, patch the walls, maybe even repaint that old swing. I never questioned Kyle’s presence there—I figured if something was wrong, Grandma would say so.
Then came a Tuesday that changed everything.
We were on a video call while I made a quiche, something Grandma had taught me. But she wasn’t in her kitchen. Gone were the yellow curtains and tiny cactus by the window.
“Where are you?” I asked.
Her smile didn’t quite reach her eyes. “At a care facility, love. Kyle thought it would be safer. Mold, bad wiring… he didn’t want me getting hurt.”
I dropped everything. I was on a plane that night.
When I arrived, the house was gone. Not burned, not crumbling—sold. A giant “SOLD” sign gleamed where my childhood had stood. The shutters were new, sterile. The porch swing was gone. Kyle’s car? Nowhere in sight.
I stood there, stunned, calling the care facility. They transferred me to Grandma’s room—said she was down the hall making beaded jewelry. That’s how they described her now. Someone who “sat and watched.”
When I saw her, she lit up. But her blanket was thin, her room was bleak, and her smile was tired.
“Grandma,” I whispered, “What happened?”
She took my hand. “I never signed the house over to him. Not the deed. Nothing. But someone helped him make it look like I did. That’s the only way he pulled this off.”
My body filled with a heat I hadn’t known I was capable of. Kyle had taken our home—our only home—and stashed Grandma away like she was clutter. And worse? He used the money I sent home every month. Money I thought was patching a roof, not lining his pockets.
That night, I met with Alana—a lawyer with stilettos that could slice glass. “This is classic elder exploitation,” she said, flipping through my emails. “We’ll nail him. But if you’re looking for justice, I can help. If you’re looking for vengeance… that’s your part.”
And I was.
I brought Grandma lemon bars and told her everything. She patted my hand with the same warmth she used to tuck me into bed. “You’ve got fire, baby,” she said. “That fire’s from me.”
That night, I called Kyle.
“Meet me at the house,” I said. “I’m back.”
He arrived late, fake casual in his sunglasses and smirk. “You should be thanking me,” he said. “Got Grandma into care. Saved the place from falling apart.”
I stared him down. “With what? My money?”
He shifted, tried to deflect. But I’d come prepared.
“There’s a room in the basement,” I said smoothly. “Stuff you’ve never touched. Relics, heirlooms, maybe even something worth a few bucks.”
I watched greed flash in his eyes like an ember catching wind.
Later that night, I waited across the street in a rental car. When he slipped into the house with a crowbar and black hoodie, I texted Alana. Cops were on standby. Five minutes later, flashing red and blue filled the street.
“Forgery. Theft. Breaking and entering,” I said as they cuffed him. “You really outdid yourself, Kyle.”
He gawked at me.
“There’s no secret room,” I added. “But thanks for confirming you knew you had no right to be in there.”
He stammered. But it was too late. The judge voided the sale. Grandma’s name was put back on the deed. The fraudulent notary who helped Kyle got a deal to testify. Kyle? Six months in jail. Two years probation. A criminal record he couldn’t scrub with bleach.
That fall, Grandma moved back in.
We repainted the shutters lavender and hung a new porch swing. I took unpaid leave to help her settle in, and every evening, we sat with lemonade and pie, rocking slowly in the glow of our porch light.
“He can’t touch us again,” I said.
She smiled, her hand resting on mine. “We’ve lost a lot,” she whispered. “But not each other.”
And that’s what mattered.
Not revenge. Not even justice. Just that we’d kept each other.
That the fire never went out.
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