“Yes.”
“Your mother was here. Then her husband removed her.”
“Removed her?”
The nurse hesitated. “Against medical advice.”
I was dressed in four minutes. Before leaving, I opened my safe and took a black folder, a flash drive, and my bar card. Richard loved telling people I was “just a quiet legal researcher.” He never mentioned I was the chief fraud investigator for the state attorney’s office.
By 3:26, I was driving straight into the blizzard.
The highway had turned into a white tunnel. Trucks were tipped into ditches. My hands cramped on the wheel. Every mile, I heard my mother’s voice again.
Help me.
At sunrise, I reached St. Agnes.
She wasn’t inside.
I found her outside the side gate, curled against the frozen concrete in a hospital gown. Barefoot. Bruised. Blue-lipped. Snow crusted in her hair.
“Mom.”
Her eyes opened. For one terrible second, she looked afraid of me.
Then she sobbed, “They left me.”
I carried her through the emergency doors, shouting for help. Nurses rushed in. A doctor barked orders. My mother clung to my sleeve like a child.
Later, beneath harsh fluorescent lights, she told me everything.
Richard had taken her phone, her cards, her medication. My half-brother Caleb had driven her to the hospital after she collapsed. But when nurses questioned the bruises, Caleb called Richard. Richard showed up with power-of-attorney papers, called my mother “confused,” refused treatment, and dragged her out.
“She was embarrassing us,” Mom whispered. “Caleb said I should have died quietly.”
I drove to the house before my rage could turn into tears.
Richard opened the door in a silk robe, coffee steaming in his hand.



