I walked back into the house because I’d forgotten my reading glasses on the dining room table. At 70 years old, those moments of forgetfulness had become more frequent than I would like to admit.
I opened the front door carefully, without making a sound. And that’s when I heard my son, Robert, talking on the phone in the living room. His tone was different. There was something in that laugh that chilled my blood. I froze in the hallway when I heard him say, with a malicious, gut-wrenching chuckle:
“I can only imagine her face when she sees the empty account. Honey, it’s done. I transferred all the money to your account, just like we planned.”
I felt the floor move beneath my feet. My own son, my only son, was talking about me as if I were a stranger, as if I were his victim. I leaned against the hallway wall, trying to process what I had just heard.
Robert continued talking in a voice I had never known, cold and calculating.
“Don’t worry, Sarah. She never suspected a thing. She trusts me too much. It’s always been that way. Too naïve for her own good.”
Every word was like a direct stab to the heart. I recognized the name Sarah—his wife, the woman who had entered our lives barely two years ago with that perfect smile and those sweet words that I now understood were completely fake.