“I have here every fraudulent transaction, every forged signature, every unauthorized withdrawal—three hundred and twenty thousand dollars that you spent at casinos, on luxuries, on maintaining a lifestyle you couldn’t afford.”
“I had permission,” Mark lied. “Mom gave me access to her accounts.”
“Show me the document where I gave you that permission,” I said.
“I don’t have it here, but it exists.”
“It doesn’t exist, Mark,” I said, “because I never gave you permission. You forged my signature, and I have handwriting experts who can prove it.”
Rachel began to cry.
“Mark, you said this was legal. You said your mother agreed.”
“Shut up,” Mark ordered her.
“No, I won’t shut up,” she snapped back.
Sarah continued, her voice steady.
“We also have evidence that Mark contacted a hospital employee, Frank Herrera, offering him fifty thousand dollars to accelerate Ms. Helen’s death using lethal doses of morphine.”
One of the detectives stood up.
“Mr. Mark Harrison, you are under arrest for conspiracy to commit homicide, fraud, theft, and document forgery.”
“No—wait. This is ridiculous,” Mark sputtered. “Mom, tell them this is a mistake.”
I looked him directly in the eyes.
“There is no mistake, Mark. You planned my murder. You stole my money. You celebrated the idea of my death. And you thought you were smart enough to get away with it.”
“You’re my mother,” he said, voice cracking. “How can you do this to me?”
“How could you do everything you did to me?” I demanded. “I gave you everything, Mark. Everything. I loved you unconditionally, and you wished for my death for money.”
Tears streamed down my face now, but they were not tears of weakness. They were tears of rage and liberation.
The detectives placed handcuffs on Mark’s wrists. He struggled, screamed, denied everything.
Rachel tried to run toward the door, but the other detective stopped her.
“You, too, Ms. Harrison. Conspiracy and complicity.”
“No,” Rachel sobbed. “I only did what Mark told me. It’s not my fault.”
“You have the right to remain silent,” the detective began as he put the handcuffs on her.
Sarah approached me.
“Do you want to say anything else before they take them away?”
I looked at Mark one last time—my son, the baby I had carried, the boy I had raised, the man who had betrayed me in the cruelest way possible.
“Just one thing,” I said. “The papers you signed yesterday—the property transfers, the bank access—all of that was fake. It has no legal value. You have nothing, Mark. Absolutely nothing.”
His eyes widened in horror.
“No. It can’t be.”
“And my real will,” I continued, “the one I signed with three witnesses four days ago, leaves everything to your uncle Michael and to veterans’ charities. You will receive fifty thousand dollars—the legal minimum.”
Mark let out a primal scream of pure rage that echoed through the house.
“No! That’s mine. It’s all mine. I worked for that.”
“You worked?” My voice rose. “When did you work, Mark? Because I built this empire cleaning offices at night while you slept. I signed contracts after twenty hours without rest. I risked everything I had while you enjoyed a comfortable life you never earned.”
“You’re my mother,” Mark shouted. “You had an obligation to give me everything.”
“I had an obligation to raise you, educate you, love you—and I did,” I said. “But I have no obligation to reward you for wishing for my death.”
The detectives began to drag him toward the door. Mark continued to shout obscenities, threats, desperate pleas.
Rachel cried hysterically.
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