I baked Evan’s favorite triple-chocolate cake while a bruise darkened across my cheek. The kitchen smelled like cocoa and butter while upstairs, my grown son screamed at strangers through his gaming headset like nothing had happened. His girlfriend, Marissa, wandered downstairs and casually asked if I was still angry. I smiled softly and kept stirring batter.
Then she mentioned my will. Carefully. Casually. Like someone testing a locked door. She claimed Evan worried about me because I was “forgetful” and “emotional.” That was the moment I knew neither of them saw me as a mother anymore. Just an aging woman they thought they could control.
What they didn’t know was that I spent years investigating financial fraud for a living. Two weeks earlier, my attorney discovered forged documents attempting to transfer power of attorney over my accounts to Evan. My signature had been copied. My license had been scanned. They almost succeeded.
But almost wasn’t enough. I filed fraud reports, secured my finances, installed security cameras, and documented everything—including the slap Evan gave me that morning. By afternoon, the police were already on their way-
