I mean… I want to rebuild from a better place. Honestly.”
This time, I studied my daughter’s face. She looked sincere—broken, repentant.
Then I noticed her purse.
New.
Designer.
Probably $800 at least.
“Is that purse new?” I asked.
Rebecca’s hand went to it reflexively.
“This? No. I’ve had it for—”
“Don’t lie to me anymore, Rebecca.”
“Please.” She deflated.
“Derek bought it for me last week. He said I needed something nice to…”
She stopped, face flushing.
“To what?”
“To wear when we came to talk to you,” she admitted. “He said you’d respond better if I looked put together.
Professional.”
Something cold crystallized in my chest.
“So this visit was planned with Derek.”
“Mom, no—”
“He’s probably waiting in the car, isn’t he?”
“Mom—no.”
I walked to the window.
Sure enough, Derek’s car was parked down the street, engine running.
I turned back to Rebecca. “Get out.”
“Mom, please—”
“You came here to manipulate me. Everything you just said—the tears, the confession, the promises—it was scripted.
Derek is waiting outside to see if you succeeded.”
“It wasn’t like that.”
“Then why is he here? Why did he buy you a new purse for this conversation? Why are you still lying to me?”
My voice rose despite myself.
“I am your mother.
I deserve basic respect. Basic honesty.”
Rebecca stood, her own anger finally surfacing. “You want honesty?
Fine. Yes—Derek helped me plan what to say. Yes, he’s outside because you won’t talk to us.
You’ve shut us out completely. What were we supposed to do?”
“Not steal from me?” I said. “Not threaten me with guardianship?
Not show up with rehearsed apologies and designer accessories while claiming to be broke?”
“We are broke!” she shouted. “This purse was charged to a credit card we can’t pay. Everything is falling apart.”
And instead of helping us like family should, you’re hiring lawyers and making threats.
What happened to you? When did you become so cold?”
The words struck like a slap.
Cold.
Is that what I’d become?
Then I remembered the bank statements, the unauthorized withdrawals, the humiliation.
“I became cold,” I said quietly, “when my daughter stole from me and let her husband call me an embarrassment.”
Rebecca’s face crumpled. “I said I was sorry.”
“Sorry isn’t enough.
Actions have consequences, Rebecca. Choices have consequences. You chose Derek’s lifestyle over your integrity.
You chose theft over honesty. Now you’re choosing manipulation over genuine repentance.”
“I am being genuine!”
“Then leave Derek right now,” I said. “Walk out to that car and tell him you’re staying here with me and that you’ll fix this on your own terms.
Show me you choose me over him.”
Rebecca stared at me, mouth open. “I… I can’t do that.”
“Then we have nothing more to discuss. Goodbye, Rebecca.”
She stood there for another moment, torn.
I could see the war on her face.
Then her expression hardened.
The moment passed.
“You’ll regret this,” she said. “Derek was right. You are cold and bitter.
We tried to make peace. We tried to apologize. But you’d rather be right than have a family.”
She walked to the door.
Before leaving, she turned back.
“When you’re alone and miserable… remember, you chose this.”
The door slammed.
I sat down, hands shaking—not with fear this time, but with rage, with clarity.
I picked up my phone and texted Mr. Hendrickx: They attempted manipulation with a scripted apology. Derek was waiting outside.
Everything recorded. Proceeding as planned.
His response: “Good. Stay strong.
We file suit on Friday.”
I wasn’t backing down. Not now. Not ever.
The lawsuit was filed Friday morning.
I sued Rebecca and Derek for $23,000 plus legal fees, citing unauthorized access to financial accounts and breach of fiduciary duty. Mr. Hendrickx assured me it was solid.
The bank records were damning. They couldn’t dispute the unauthorized withdrawals.
Monday, I received a subpoena to appear for a deposition. So did Derek and Rebecca.
The date was set for three weeks out.
During those three weeks, the phone calls and texts intensified—from their friends, Derek’s family, even people I barely knew. Each message was a variation of the same theme: How could you do this to your own daughter? Family should forgive.
You’re tearing them apart over money.
I blocked every number. I forwarded every message to my lawyer.
Then, ten days before the deposition, something unexpected happened.
My doorbell rang at 9:00 a.m. I opened it to find a well-dressed woman in her fifties carrying a briefcase.
Morrison, I’m Jennifer Caldwell—Derek’s mother’s attorney. May I come in?”
Not Linda’s. Derek’s mother’s attorney.
Interesting.
I let her in, but remained standing.
“What is this about?”
Morrison, I’ll be direct. Linda Caldwell hired me after learning the full extent of what her son has been doing. She’s mortified.
She had no idea he’d been stealing from you or that he’d threatened you with guardianship.”
I blinked. “Linda sent you?”
“Yes. She wants you to know she doesn’t condone Derek’s behavior.
She’s also willing to testify on your behalf if needed.” Jennifer pulled out a folder. “But more importantly, she hired a forensic accountant to examine Derek and Rebecca’s finances. What we found is troubling.”
She laid out documents on my coffee table: bank statements, credit card bills, loan documents.
“Derek and Rebecca are in debt to the tune of $340,000.
The house is mortgaged to 95% of its value. They have 17 credit cards, all maxed out. Derek has been taking cash advances to pay minimum payments on other cards.”
She pointed to highlighted sections.
“He’s also been embezzling from his company.
Small amounts, but consistent. $500 here, $1,200 there. It’s been going on for eight months.”
My stomach turned.
“Does his company know?”
“Not yet, but they will.
Linda found the evidence and reported it herself.”
Jennifer looked at me seriously. “Derek is facing criminal charges for embezzlement—likely within the next week. His career is over.
And Rebecca is either willfully blind or complicit. Hard to say, but Mrs. Morrison… here’s why I’m here.
Linda wants to offer you a settlement. She’ll pay the full $23,000 you’re owed plus your legal fees immediately. In exchange, you drop the lawsuit against Derek and Rebecca.”
“Why would she do that?”
“Because she’s ashamed of her son.
Because she likes you. And because she knows that when Derek is arrested, Rebecca will have no one. Linda hopes that by settling your claim, you might eventually be able to reconcile with your daughter.
That’s up to you. But at least the money won’t be the issue.”
I sat down, processing this.
“When is Derek being arrested?”
“Probably Wednesday. His employer is working with law enforcement now.”
“Does Derek know?”
Neither does Rebecca.”
I thought about Derek’s smirk at dinner—his threats, his manipulation—and now this embezzlement, criminal charges, his whole life collapsing.
“I’ll accept Linda’s offer,” I said. “On one condition: she tells Derek and Rebecca nothing until after he’s arrested. I want them to face the deposition believing they still have the upper hand.”
Jennifer smiled slightly.
“Linda anticipated you might say something like that. She agrees.”
We shook hands.
The settlement papers would be drawn up by the end of day, but the real reckoning was still coming.
Wednesday, 2:00 p.m.
The deposition.
I sat across from Derek and Rebecca at a conference table in Mr. Hendrickx’s office.
A court reporter typed silently in the corner. Derek’s lawyer, a slick young man named Brad, sat next to them, looking confident. Derek looked tired but defiant.
Rebecca looked scared.
Brad started.
“Mrs. Morrison, isn’t it true that you willingly gave money to your daughter and son-in-law on multiple occasions?”
“I was asked for loans. I agreed.”
“Loans require documentation of intent to repay.
Do you have any such documentation?”
“No. I trusted my family.”
“So you admit these were gifts, not loans.”
“I admit I didn’t expect my daughter to steal from me on top of the money I freely gave.”
Derek leaned forward. “We didn’t steal.”
Brad put a hand on his arm.
“Let me handle this, Derek.”
Mr. Hendrickx slid documents across the table. “These are bank records showing unauthorized withdrawals from Mrs.
Morrison’s account. Rebecca Morrison’s credentials were used. The IP address traces to the Morrison-Jenkins household.
Please explain how these aren’t theft.”
Brad’s confidence flickered. He whispered with Derek and Rebecca. Rebecca’s face went pale as she looked at the documents.
“My client was authorized to access that account,” Brad said.
“For emergencies,” Hendrickx replied, cold and precise, “not for personal use—and certainly not without permission.
We have Mrs. Morrison’s statements. We have character witnesses.
We have bank testimony. What do you have?”
Derek’s phone buzzed. He glanced at it, frowned, then his face went white.
He stood abruptly.
“I need to take this.”
“Mr. Jenkins, we’re in

