Gone was any trace of pride. Only a man clinging desperately to money.
My mother followed suit.
“I’m sorry, Mom. I had a moment of weakness. I’ll never do it again. Please reconsider.”
From above them, my grandmother replied in an icy voice.
“If you want to apologize, do it to Mandy. She’s the victim, not me.”
My parents and Ashley’s eyes all turned to me at once, pleading, fawning, and underneath it all, that same entitled assumption.
We’re family, so she’ll forgive us.
I slowly lifted my wine glass and took a sip. Then I smiled sweetly.
“No, I don’t possess mercy. The only thing I have for you is an invoice.”
I accepted the final document from Attorney Watson.
“This is a demand for restitution of unjust enrichment over the past 3 years, along with damages for emotional distress. The total amount due is $2 million. If payment is not made by tomorrow, criminal prosecution will proceed immediately.”
“$2 million?” my father screamed. “There’s no way we have that kind of money.”
“Then sell what you do have,” I said coldly. “Your house, your cars, your jewelry, and that house Kevin’s parents are living in. You’ll vacate it immediately.”
“No.”
Ashley collapsed to the floor.
“Kicking Kevin’s mom and dad out. If I do that, he’ll divorce me.”
“That’s none of my concern. That’s your problem, Ashley.”
I cut her off coldly.
“When I lost my job and my credit was destroyed, did any of you worry about me? No. You all mocked me. Now it’s your turn to taste that same misery.”
At that moment, a heavy knock sounded at the dining room door, and two officers wearing sheriff’s badges entered.
“Ashley Thompson, please come with us to the station.”
“No, help me. I didn’t do anything wrong.”
Ashley screamed as she was dragged away.
Next, my parents, still in shock, were placed in handcuffs as well.
“Mandy, I’m sorry, Mandy,” my mother sobbed, looking at me through tears. “I was wrong. Please, please drop the charges.”
“Goodbye, Mom,” I said without looking away. “Count the wrinkles on your face in prison. You’ll have plenty of time.”
As the police sirens faded into the distance, only my grandmother, Attorney Watson, and I remained in the vast dining room.
I let out a long breath.
It wasn’t exhaustion.
It was relief.
As if a curse had finally been lifted.
“It’s over, Grandma.”
“Yes, it is,” she said gently, pulling me into an embrace. “No, actually, that’s not quite right. This is where it begins. Your real life.”
One year has passed since that night.
I’m standing now on the wooden deck of Lakeside Manor. This place is truly mine.
Ashley, her husband, and his parents were forcibly evicted within 72 hours of that night. Her in-laws claimed they had been told the house belonged to their daughter-in-law and that they were victims, too.
However, because they had lived there knowing the rent was suspiciously low and the contract was flawed, they were questioned as potential accomplices.
Ashley was sentenced to 3 years in prison and is currently incarcerated.
She divorced Kevin and was completely bankrupted by damages and legal fees.
My parents lost all social credibility and were cut off by relatives across the board. My father’s company went bankrupt, and I hear they’re now scraping by in a small apartment.
But I don’t even know their contact information, nor do I want to.
As for me, I started a new business in this quiet home: online consulting, financial planning, and victim support.
When I began sharing my own harrowing experiences, the response was overwhelming. Before I knew it, my schedule was booked months in advance, and my income grew to dozens of times what I made back when I was juggling three jobs.
I no longer depend on anyone.
I’ve achieved complete financial independence.
On weekends, my grandmother comes to stay here, and we sit by the fireplace, talking and laughing as if reclaiming the three years that were stolen from us.
One day, gazing calmly out over the lake, she said, “You didn’t just reclaim the future that was taken from you. Through integrity and courage, you built an even brighter one.”
“This is my home, the place I protect, the place I love.”
“I’m happy, Grandma,” I said from the bottom of my heart.
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