Part 2

Part 2

The front door opened.

Captain Ruiz stepped inside with two military police investigators. Behind them came Detective Harris, a child protective services worker, my attorney Naomi Price, and two paramedics carrying emergency bags.

Eleanor’s face went pale.

Audrey recovered first.

“Lucas, this is ridiculous. You brought police into family matters?”

Detective Harris looked at Sophia’s injuries.

“Assault and unlawful imprisonment are not family matters.”

The paramedics rushed to Leo. His temperature was dangerously high, and he was badly dehydrated. One paramedic called for an ambulance while the other checked his oxygen.

Sophia clutched my sleeve.

“Please don’t leave me.”

“I’m not going anywhere.”

Eleanor pointed at her.

“She’s manipulating you. She refused to cook, clean, or help around the house. We were teaching her responsibility.”

Naomi placed a thick folder on the dining table.

“By hurting her?”

“No one hurt anyone,” Audrey snapped.

Captain Ruiz held up a sealed evidence bag.

Inside was the nursery camera’s memory card.

Audrey’s face changed.

I had installed that camera before leaving because Leo was due while I was deployed. It uploaded footage automatically to an encrypted account.

Eleanor had unplugged the router whenever she wanted privacy, not realizing the camera stored recordings locally and uploaded them later when the internet came back.

Ruiz pressed play on a tablet.

The first clip showed Eleanor dragging Sophia by the hair because dinner was late.

The second showed Audrey hitting her while Leo cried in the crib.

Another showed them locking the doors and taking Sophia’s phone.

Then a clip showed Eleanor pouring Leo’s medicine down the sink.

“She was giving him too much,” Eleanor said quickly.

The caseworker checked a dosage log Sophia had hidden inside a diaper box.

“No,” she said coldly. “She was following the doctor’s instructions.”

I turned to Sophia.

“How long has this been happening?”

Her eyes filled.

“Since two weeks after you left. They said you gave them authority over me. They showed me messages from your number.”

Naomi laid several printed records beside the tablet.

“Those messages came from a cloned account created on Audrey’s laptop.”

Audrey backed away.

“You can’t prove I wrote them.”

Naomi didn’t blink.

“We can. Device history, network records, and cloud backups all point to you.”

Eleanor tried to regain control.

“Even if things got heated, Lucas will not destroy his own family.”

I opened the folder.

Inside were copies of my grandfather’s trust documents, Eleanor’s temporary occupancy agreement, and bank records showing that she and Audrey had moved thirty-eight thousand dollars from the household emergency account using Sophia’s forged signature.

Eleanor stared at the papers.

“What is this?”

“The proof that you chose the wrong person to underestimate.”

I pushed the trust deed toward her.

Her eyes dropped to the owner’s name.

Mine.

For the first time that night, the arrogance left her face.

Audrey lunged toward the folder, but Detective Harris caught her wrist before she could grab it. Her wineglass fell and shattered on the floor.

“You forged my wife’s name,” I said. “You stole deployment benefits. You sold her jewelry, canceled medical appointments, and told the neighbors she was unstable.”

Eleanor lifted her chin.

“We deserved something after everything we did for you.”

“You didn’t raise me,” I said. “Grandpa did, after you disappeared for five years. And his instructions were very clear: protect the family that protects you.”

Sophia started crying.

Eleanor did not

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