It wasn’t.
Eric stumbled into the hallway moments later, disheveled and pale, looking like someone whose decisions had finally caught up with him. He kept saying, “Can we just talk about this?” Funny how people discover the importance of conversation only after consequences arrive.
I showed up ten minutes later with Mason, the locksmith, and legal paperwork in hand.
Diane looked at my face and, for the first time, seemed shaken by what she had done. My skin was red and swollen despite treatment, my eye puffy, burns visible down my neck.
She still said, “It was an accident.”
One of the officers answered before I could. “Ma’am, the video says otherwise.”
Eric turned to me. “Lena, please. Don’t do this.”
I met his eyes. “You watched your mother demand money, admitted you gave her my card, and stood there while she threw boiling coffee in my face.”
His shoulders dropped. “I didn’t think she’d actually—”
“Exactly.”
Mason handed Eric an envelope—revocation of account access, fraud dispute forms already filed. The joint card had been frozen hours earlier. The bank was investigating the charges as unauthorized.
Diane’s expression shifted to fear. “Wait—what does that mean?”
“It means,” I said, “the card you treated like your personal allowance stopped working six hours ago.”
Her mouth fell open.