After Mom went back upstairs, Abigail opened a thick folder on the table. The psychiatric evaluation was officially scheduled for nine o’clock the following morning with a specialist named Dr. Angela Ross. If Mom were officially declared incompetent by the doctor, Abigail wanted me to sign the guardianship papers immediately.
“We can finally sell her house,” Abigail said, tapping the documents. “We will use the proceeds to pay for a high end facility.”
“Her house has been paid off for years,” I reminded her.
“Exactly,” she replied.
That single word confirmed that this had never been about Mom’s safety or health.
I spent the entire afternoon gathering the evidence I needed to destroy her case.
I called the county clerk and verified that Mom’s property records now carried an official fraud alert, meaning no deed, lien, or guardianship order could be used to move the house into the shell company owned by a local developer named Raymond.
A contact of mine in the attorney general’s office confirmed that the transfer request carried a scanned, forged version of Mom’s signature. I had a locksmith document that the bedroom door lock was modified to open only from the outside, and a military physician photographed Mom’s wrists, noting that the pattern of bruising suggested intentional, forceful restraint rather than accidental falls.
Then Mom gave me the missing piece of the puzzle that Abigail had completely overlooked.
“Check your father’s old desk,” she whispered to me. “Look in the bottom drawer.”
Inside, I found a small, vintage camera disguised as a smoke detector. Dad had installed it years ago after a string of neighborhood burglaries, and Abigail had disabled the modern cameras but missed this older, independent system. The memory card inside contained weeks of incriminating footage.
It showed Abigail dragging Mom by the arms through the house.
It showed Abigail taking her phone and locking her away.
It showed Abigail sitting at the table, rehearsing her lines for the neighbors.
And, three nights earlier, it showed Abigail meeting with Raymond, a local property developer.
“Once she is declared incompetent,” Raymond said on the tape, “the house can be sold well below market value without any legal trouble.”
Abigail leaned in and kissed him, sealing the pact.
At that moment, my desire for revenge stopped being personal, and it became a professional case.
That evening, I copied everything into three separate digital files. One was sent to Dr. Ross, one was sent to Detective Cooper in the elder abuse unit, and the third was scheduled for automated delivery to Abigail’s defense attorney the moment the evaluation began.
Abigail grew reckless because I kept acting like the oblivious, obedient soldier.
Over dinner, she drank more wine than usual and said, “Your mother always hated me, and now she just looks pathetic.”
“She might eventually recover,” I replied, watching her carefully.
Abigail snorted. “From dementia? Do not be ridiculous.”




