Mason added calmly, “And because Ms. Carter is the sole homeowner, both of you are being removed pending further legal action.”
Eric went pale. “Removed to where?”
I almost laughed.
For eleven months, they treated me like an unlimited resource. Not once did they consider what would happen if I stopped paying.
Now they were finally asking.
By noon, they were out.
Not permanently—not yet—but under the temporary order, Diane could not remain after the assault complaint, and Eric chose to leave with her when I made it clear he could not stay without full cooperation, repayment, and a separation agreement.
He chose his mother.
That didn’t hurt as much as I expected. It just made things clear.
The harsh surprise Diane woke up to wasn’t dramatic revenge.
It was something far worse for someone like her: documentation, legal action, and consequences that couldn’t be shouted away.
By midmorning, the locks were changed, garage access reset, gate code updated. Security access revoked. My accountant froze the household account and redirected my income. Utilities stayed in my name, of course—but Diane’s phone line, streaming services, and the department store account I had co-signed were canceled or flagged before lunch.
She sat in the driveway, muttering, while officers supervised. Eric loaded suitcases, glancing at me like I might change my mind.
I didn’t.
When Diane realized the fraud dispute included the handbag store, she exploded. “You can’t accuse me of fraud! We’re family!”
I stood on the porch with an ice pack against my neck. “You stopped being family when you burned my face and tried to extort me.”
Her voice shook. “I was angry.”
“So was I,” I said. “I still didn’t assault anyone.”