“Well,” he said. “The little librarian came running.”
Caleb appeared behind him, smirking. “What are you going to do, Lena? File a complaint?”
I looked at their warm house—my mother’s house. Her paintings were gone. Richard’s golf trophies lined the walls.
I smiled.
“No,” I said. “Nothing loud.”
They laughed.
That was their first mistake.
They thought quiet meant helpless.
They didn’t understand that quiet is how I collect evidence….
PART 2
Richard refused to let me step inside.
“Your mother is unstable,” he said. “You’re making things worse.”
Caleb leaned against the frame. “She signed everything over, Lena. House, accounts, medical decisions. You missed the game.”
I glanced at him. “Did I?”
His smile faltered.
Richard moved closer. “Listen carefully. Your mother will come back when she apologizes. Until then, she has nothing. No money. No home. No family except us.”
I wanted to break his jaw.
Instead, I said, “I understand.”
Caleb laughed. “That’s it? God, you really are weak.”
I walked away without raising my voice.
By noon, my mother was admitted under protective hold. By one, I had photos of her injuries. By two, I had the nurse’s statement. By three, I had hospital security footage of Richard dragging a barefoot, injured woman through a side exit while Caleb carried her purse.
At four, I called Judge Morrison.
At five, I filed for an emergency injunction.
At six, I froze every account tied to my mother’s name.



