Earlier this year, I gave my condo to my grandson, 19, who’s lived with me since his mother left. Suddenly, she returned, pregnant with her husband, demanding the condo. “We need this more, we’re a family,” they said.
I refused to listen, until I found her sitting on my couch one afternoon—arms crossed, eyes smug—like she’d never left. Let me back up a bit. My name is Noreen.
I’m 67, retired, and I’ve lived in the same modest two-bedroom condo in Glendale for over 30 years. It’s not fancy, but it’s mine, paid off, and filled with memories—some good, some I’d rather forget. My daughter, Daritza, left when she was 22.
She’d had my grandson, Renzo, young—barely 17. Her boyfriend at the time split a few months after Renzo was born. I helped raise him while she floated in and out of jobs, apartments, and sometimes reality.
When she took off to Arizona “just for a few weeks” and never came back, Renzo was only seven. I stepped up. I raised him.
Soccer games, school pickups, late-night math homework—he became my world. And I never resented it. He was always kind, quiet, a little shy, but respectful.
A good kid. When he graduated high school last year, I surprised him. I told him the condo would be his.
Not right away—I’d still live there—but I had updated my will and planned to formally gift it to him while I was alive. I even called a lawyer and handled the paperwork properly. His eyes welled up.
He hugged me for the first time in months. “Thank you, abuela,” he said. “I’ll take care of you.”
That was all I needed to hear.
Three months later, she showed up. He was at work, and I was folding laundry. Doorbell rang, I opened it—and there she was, belly out, fake lashes, and that same smirk that used to get her out of trouble in high school.
“Hey, Ma,” she said like it hadn’t been 12 years. Behind her stood a man in cargo shorts with slicked-back hair and mirrored sunglasses. He didn’t say much, just nodded like we’d met.
We hadn’t. “You gonna let us in, or…?”
I didn’t want a scene in front of the neighbors, so I stepped aside. She walked in like she owned the place.
Looked around, poked her head into the kitchen, touched the fridge handle. “This place held up,” she said. “Not bad.”
I stood in the hallway, stunned.
She finally sat down and told me the whole tale: She’d married some guy named Rion, they’d moved back to California after living in a “toxic town,” and they were expecting their second kid. They were broke, renting a motel in Santa Clarita, and needed a real home. “We figured it just makes sense,” she said, rubbing her belly.
“This place should be for us. We’re a family.”
“You left your son,” I said, flatly. “That was complicated,” she shot back.
“You don’t know what I went through.”
Renzo came home later that night to find them both still there—her feet up on the ottoman, Rion eating leftover lasagna from the fridge. His face went pale. She stood up and went to hug him.
He stepped back. “Renzo,” she said, all sugary. “I missed you.”
He didn’t say a word.
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