Carla sobbed loudly, a wretched, pathetic sound of total defeat, burying her face in her trembling hands.
The court seized everything. They seized the massive, sprawling estate she had lived in for thirty years. They liquidated her retirement accounts, her stock portfolios, and her luxury cars. They stripped her of her wealth, her social standing, and her pride. Her other son, Spencer, the arrogant parasite who had measured my doors with a tape measure, was left entirely homeless, forced to sleep on a friend’s couch in a cramped apartment, realizing his mother’s bank account was permanently empty.
They had tried to steal my life, and in doing so, they had eagerly strapped themselves to an anchor and thrown themselves into the abyss.
Miles away, bathed in the brilliant, warm sunlight of a clear autumn morning, a completely different reality was unfolding.
I was sitting on the sprawling, cedar-wood deck of a beautiful, brand-new, four-bedroom home. It was located in a quiet, picturesque coastal town in North Carolina, thousands of miles away from the toxic, suffocating gravity of the Fredel family.