Part 2

Part 2

I didn’t waste a single breath arguing with the woman standing across the room. Option B was the only choice that mattered: get my family to safety. Cradling Leo against my chest, I felt his tiny, erratic heartbeat slowly synchronize with mine. I leaned down, hooking my free arm under Clara’s knees and behind her back, hoisting her limp body up. The sheer dead weight of my wife sent a shock of adrenaline through my veins. “What do you think you’re doing?” my mother snapped, her composure finally cracking. She stepped into my path, blocking the entryway to the hall. “You are not walking out of my house. Put them down and sit at this table like a man.” I locked eyes with her, the rage boiling inside me finally chilling into absolute ice. “Your house?” I sneered, my voice low but vibrating with a quiet fury that made her take a half-step back. “My name is on the deed, Mom. I pay the mortgage. You are merely a guest, and right now, you are a trespasser. Get out of my way before I call the cops.” For the first time in my thirty-two years of life, my mother looked genuinely stunned. The invincible matriarch who had controlled every aspect of my youth suddenly realized she had no strings left to pull.

I didn’t wait for her to recover. I shouldered past her, the diaper bag snagging on the doorframe as I practically kicked the front door open. The humid Chicago air hit me like a wall, but I didn’t stop until I reached my SUV. I secured Leo in his car seat, his cries finally subsiding into exhausted hiccups, and gently laid Clara in the passenger seat, reclining it all the way back. As I peeled out of the driveway, I glanced in the rearview mirror. My mother was standing on the porch, watching us leave, her silhouette framed by the porch light. It was the first time I had ever walked away from her. We checked into a Marriott five miles down the highway. Once we were inside the room, I laid Clara on the bed and immediately dialed 911, but just as the operator answered, Clara groaned and batted at my arm. “Mark?” she whispered, her voice raspy and slurred. I canceled the call and rushed to her side, pouring a glass of water from the nightstand. She drank greedily, tears spilling over her cheeks. “I’m so sorry, Mark. I tried to stay awake, I really did, but she kept making me drink that tea.” I froze. “What tea, Clara?”

She took a shaky breath, pulling her knees to her chest. “Your mother. She said it was an old family recipe for postpartum recovery. But every time I drank it, the room would spin. Today, she forced me to cook that massive dinner, and when I begged for a break to feed Leo, she shoved a mug of it into my hands and said I was being a pathetic, weak mother. I took a sip just to appease her, and the next thing I knew, my legs gave out.” A sickening dread clawed at my stomach. I remembered grabbing the diaper bag on my way out. My mother had packed it this morning while Clara was resting. I grabbed the floral-patterned bag and unzipped the main compartment, frantically digging through diapers and wipes until my fingers brushed against something hard and plastic. I pulled out a small, amber prescription bottle. The label was peeled off, but inside were half a dozen heavy sedative pills—the exact same medication my mother was prescribed for her severe insomnia a year ago. It wasn’t just cruelty; it was a calculated poisoning. She was deliberately trying to drug my wife to make her look like an incompetent, negligent mother. But why? What was her endgame?

Just as the horrific reality of my mother’s betrayal set in, my phone buzzed in my pocket. It was a text message from a neighbor back home, accompanied by a photo. “Mark, is everything okay? Your mom is having men load boxes into a moving van.” I stared at the photo on my cracked screen. It wasn’t her things they were loading. They were taking my heavy iron safe, my locked filing cabinet of financial documents, and the antique jewelry box Clara had inherited from her grandmother. My mother wasn’t just trying to break my family apart—she was preparing to clean us out completely.

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