Aiden’s face did that thing faces do when a lie meets a fact — a quick flicker, then a forced laugh. “What are you talking about, Mom? Don’t be dramatic.” Brielle’s smile slipped a half-inch. I reached into my purse and laid three things on the table: a photograph of the attic chest, a receipt from a forensic document examiner dated two weeks ago, and a small voice recorder. “Your father noticed the chest had been moved in March,” I said quietly. “I noticed the refinance offers in the mail in April. By May, I had the deed pulled and compared.” I pressed play. Aiden’s voice filled the kitchen, talking to Brielle in our own living room: “Mom signs everything I put in front of her. She trusts me. Once it’s transferred, we list it by August.” Brielle’s face went the color of skim milk. Mark finally spoke. “We raised you better than this, son.” I slid a second folder across the table. “This is the report I filed Monday morning. Forgery of a notarized instrument is a felony in this state. My lawyer — you remember Aunt Patricia? — she advised me to give you one chance to make this right before the DA returns my call tomorrow at nine.” Aiden’s hands started to shake. “Mom, please —” “You will withdraw every filing. You will sign a quitclaim restoring the house to us. You will pay back the eight thousand dollars you took from Dad’s retirement account that we also found. And Brielle —” I turned, gentle as a scalpel, “— you will go home to your mother tonight, because a marriage built on stealing from a sick man’s parents won’t survive what’s coming.” Aiden cried. Actually cried. I didn’t move to comfort him, and that was the hardest thing I’ve ever not done. Mark squeezed my hand under the table. At the door, Aiden whispered, “Will you ever forgive me?” I looked at the boy I’d rocked through fevers and the man who’d tried to evict me. “Forgiveness is free, Aiden. Trust is what you spent. And honey — that account is closed.”
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