Sorry for the Warren-spamming, but.
I think these pages, but especially the last, are perfection. The art is wonderful, and captures the uniqueness of the character Warren (handsome, angel) and also lets the faces speak. Sure, you read the balloons, but you understand what the two characters feel even by looking at their faces. Also, I like the composition, how the artist played with the space on page to tell the story.
The story itself is a jewel. The main character isn't Warren, but the old woman, and Warren's role in the story is to push a change in the woman's life, to give her the push she needs to finally embrace what she wants to do (which isn't waste away in her house, saddled by her age, with a grandson that only wants to steal her money and a neighbour who doesn't let her do anything remotely "dangerous"). Warren barely has a speaking line in 14 pages, yet as a story is better for Warren than most of the recent material with him. He has agency and his presence has a lasting effect, even if on a character that we won't see again.