Sign the papers, Mom, or you’ll be eating cat food in a county shelter

I took a sip of that fresh coffee and let the silence stretch until Brittany started fidgeting with her engagement ring. Then I opened my purse. Not for a pen. For my phone. “Tyler, sweetheart,” I said, voice steady as a Sunday hymn, “do you remember last March, when you asked me to co-sign that ‘small business loan’ for your crypto startup?” His jaw tightened. Marcus the lawyer suddenly found his water glass fascinating. “Funny thing about co-signing,” I continued. “The bank sends the statements to both parties. All forty-seven thousand dollars of withdrawals. To a casino in Atlantic City. Not a startup.” Brittany’s wine glass froze halfway to her lips. I slid my phone across the table — screenshots, transaction logs, a very polite email from a fraud investigator at First National who’d been waiting on my statement for two weeks. “I haven’t pressed charges yet,” I said. “I wanted to give my only son a chance to explain. Instead, he brought a lawyer to bully his widowed mother out of the last thing his father ever built.” Tyler’s mouth opened. Nothing came out. Marcus quietly closed his briefcase and stood up. “Tyler, I can’t be part of this. Don’t call me again.” He left a twenty on the table for his iced tea and walked out. Brittany turned to Tyler, and I watched the math happen behind her mascara — no lake house, no inheritance, a fiancé facing fraud charges. She slid the ring off her finger, set it on the deed, and said, “I’ll get an Uber.” I picked up the deed, tore it neatly in half, and tucked the pieces into my purse beside my phone. “Frank built that house for the grandchildren I hoped you’d give me, Tyler. Not for your debts.” I left two twenties for my coffee and walked out into the parking lot, where the evening air smelled like rain and freedom. My phone buzzed before I reached the car. The fraud investigator. I answered on the second ring. “Hi, Karen. Yes. I’m ready to file now.”

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