He said it was easier that way.
We trusted him.
He kept it.
Gambled it. Spent it. Lied.
Before our calls, he’d coach Mom to say she was fine. If she resisted, he’d threaten to cut her off completely.
I looked at my mother.
She nodded through tears. “I didn’t want to burden you.”
Five years. I thought dollars equaled love.
We called 911. At the hospital, doctors said she was severely malnourished and dehydrated. If we’d come later…
They didn’t finish the sentence.
We pressed charges. Bank statements, wire confirmations, call logs. Rudy eventually surrendered his assets. It didn’t give us back those lost years—but it stopped the bleeding.
Mom slowly regained strength.
After she was discharged, she never went back to that shack. We moved her into the house that once belonged to Rudy. Renovated it. Painted it. Filled it with family photos.
We made another choice that shocked everyone.
We left our jobs.
People said we were crazy—walking away from six-figure salaries.
But every morning now, when I see Mom sitting on the porch with her coffee, I know we chose right.
We started a small construction business together. Nothing flashy. Just enough.
One evening, Mom said quietly, “Do you know what hurt most?”