Mateo sat at the table, scrolling through news clips with an expression of clinical disgust.
“They are on television,” he said.
My mother appeared on screen outside a hotel on Fifth Avenue, dabbing at invisible tears with a silk handkerchief.
“We made mistakes when our daughter was young,” she told reporters. “We were too strict, perhaps too proud, but we have begged for reconciliation. She has denied us access to our only grandson for two decades out of personal resentment.”
My father stood beside her, gray-haired and solemn.
“We want only healing,” he said. “We want our grandson to know his heritage.”
I turned off the television before my coffee mug became a projectile.
Andrew closed his laptop.
“They are building public sympathy before filing for court-ordered visitation.”
“Can they do that?”
“They can file anything. Winning is different.”
Mateo leaned back.
“They are not legally my grandparents in any meaningful way, right?”
Andrew smiled slightly.
“That depends on whether Marisol was as careful as I believe she was.”
He went to the study and returned with a beige folder I had not opened in years. Inside were documents Marisol had guarded like scripture: guardianship orders, adoption-related filings, notarized statements, and the family court order from October 2005.
Andrew placed the final page in front of me.
There were my parents’ signatures, sharp and elegant beneath a clause that felt like Marisol reaching through time to steady my hand.
The biological parents voluntarily, permanently, and irrevocably relinquish any and all parental, custodial, visitation, inheritance, and familial claims regarding Lena Whitcomb and any biological descendants born to her.
My breath caught.
“She protected Mateo before he was even born.”
Andrew nodded.
“Your parents signed away not only you, but any claim connected to your future children. They did it to avoid scandal, and now that same document is going to defeat them.”
Then he played the digitized audio from the attorney’s office where the papers had been signed.
My father’s younger voice filled the kitchen.
“We understand the consequences. We want no contact with Lena or whatever child she produces.”
My mother followed, colder than memory.
“I would rather consider the matter dead.”
Mateo sat perfectly still.
I reached for his hand, but he covered mine first.
“They do not get to rewrite that,” he said.
Andrew’s expression turned strategic.
“They want public theater. We give them a better stage.”