But when the nurse came back alone, I slipped a small folded note into her hand.
Inside was my lawyer’s number.
My daughter had no idea what was about to unfold.
My name is Evelyn Parker. By the time my daughter, Sophie, pushed my wheelchair into the urgent care clinic, the bruise around my eye had already darkened into a deep purple. Beneath my blouse, my ribs ached with every breath. Faint yellow marks circled my wrist—finger-shaped reminders of what had happened two nights before.
Sophie stood beside me, poised and composed in her tailored coat, her hand resting lightly on my shoulder like she was the picture of a loving daughter.
The doctor glanced between my face and the chart.
“Mrs. Parker… can you tell me what happened?”
Before I could speak, Sophie gave a soft, polished smile.
“She loses her balance a lot. I keep telling her not to walk around by herself.”
I lowered my eyes.
Silence had become my shield.
Everything changed after my husband, Richard, passed away. Grief made me slower… weaker… easier to control.
Sophie moved into my home in Greenwich, Connecticut with her husband, Daniel, insisting she wanted to take care of me. At first, I believed her.
Then things shifted.