Patricia isn’t just running a legal scheme. She’s running a public relations campaign. Every conversation, every concerned whisper over the fence, every casserole delivered with a sorrowful headshake. She’s building a wall of witnesses.
If this goes to court, the judge won’t just hear from Dr. Voss. He’ll hear from neighbors, church friends, the entire social fabric of Rididgewood. All of them primed with the same message.
Poor Fay. She’s always been fragile. Losing Nathan pushed her over the edge.
I call Helen from the back porch that night.
“She’s poisoning the well,” I say.”
“She did the exact same thing with mom,” Helen says. “Told everyone in town that mom was confused and wandering months before she filed for guardianship. By the time I showed up with a lawyer, half the neighborhood was ready to testify against our own mother. Small town, same playbook, different decade.”
“How did you stop it?” I ask.
“I didn’t wait for permission to tell the truth.”
Dinner. Pot roast, mashed potatoes, string beans from Gerald’s garden. Patricia lights a candle. It could be Thanksgiving if you didn’t know better.
Gerald sets down his fork.
“Fay, we need to talk about the future.”
Here it comes.