Eli was Daniel Carter’s son from a previous marriage—my grandmother’s stepson, and later the one who helped her uncover the fraud. When Daniel discovered Brent’s father had been forging signatures and skimming settlement money tied to the land, he threatened to go to the sheriff. He never made it. Brent’s father cornered him in the barn. There was a fight. Daniel fell, hit his head, and died.
Accident or not, they buried the truth with him.
Mara spent years gathering proof. When Brent’s father died, Brent continued the scheme. He and Mom kept the land tangled in taxes and false filings, waiting to reclaim it cheaply through a shell buyer. But the county auction happened faster than expected, and I bought it before they could act.
That’s why they came back.
Not because they missed me. Not because they regretted anything.
Because I was standing on evidence—and a fortune.
Brent grabbed Mom’s arm and pulled her up. “Tell her the rest.”
Tears streamed down her face. “Eli didn’t disappear. I told him to run. He took copies of the records and stayed away until Mara died. He kept watching from a distance. When you bought the house, he knew the papers might finally come out.”
Sirens wailed in the distance.
Brent heard them.
His eyes flicked to the back door.
Then he lunged at me.
I barely moved in time. We crashed into the table, papers scattering. He shoved the revolver toward my face, but Rachel rushed in and struck him with the broken table leg. He staggered. I slammed my shoulder into his ribs. Mom screamed. The gun slid across the floor.
Brent bolted for the back door, making it two steps before Eli burst through it like a storm, tackling him into the pantry. Shelves collapsed. Cans rolled everywhere. By the time deputies rushed in from the front, Brent was pinned to the floor under Eli’s weight.
No one spoke for a moment.
Then Rachel began to sob.
Everything unraveled quickly after that. The documents matched county records, old bank ledgers, and letters Eli had kept hidden for years. Brent was charged with assault, fraud, conspiracy, and obstruction tied to the land theft. My mother wasn’t arrested that night, but she gave a full statement two days later. She avoided prison by cooperating, though nothing in her face looked like freedom.
Rachel tried to apologize—really apologize. Not for the retreat or the insults, but for following Mom so blindly she never questioned why I was always the one pushed out. I didn’t forgive her right away. But I answered when she called.