“What did she say?” I whispered.
“She tried to accuse him of being unprofessional. And he said—and I’m quoting—‘What’s unprofessional is refusing to save your daughter’s life because you’d rather fund your son’s vacation.’”
If it hadn’t hurt so much, I might have laughed.
“And Logan,” Avery continued. “He showed up about an hour after surgery started.”
I already knew.
“What did he say?” I asked anyway.
“‘Is this going to take all night? I have plans tomorrow.’”
Something inside me went quiet.
“Moira,” Avery said softly, “I knew your family was complicated. You’ve hinted at it before, but I didn’t know it was this bad.”
She leaned closer. “Why didn’t you tell me? Why didn’t you tell Elias?”
I swallowed.
“Because I thought it was normal. I thought all families were like this. I thought I was the problem.”
Her eyes flashed.
“You are not the problem. You have never been the problem.”
She pulled out her phone. I let out a small, unsteady snort.
“Do you still have that spreadsheet? The one tracking everything you gave them?”
I nodded.
“Good,” Avery said. “Because it’s time Elias sees all of it.”
That evening, Elias returned after his shift and handed me a folded piece of paper.
“Your dad came again today. I didn’t let him in, but he gave me this.”
I opened it. My father’s handwriting.
Moira, I don’t know how to apologize for Friday night. I failed you. I’ve been failing you for years and didn’t see it until it was almost too late. Your mother and I aren’t speaking. I don’t know if we ever will again. Logan doesn’t understand why I’m angry. He says I’m overreacting. I’m staying with your aunt Colleen for now. When you’re ready, I’d like to talk if you’ll let me. I love you. I’m sorry I didn’t protect you, Dad.
I cried again.
Elias sat on the edge of the bed.
“How long has it been like this?” he asked gently. “How long have they been using you?”
“Five years,” I whispered. “Since I started at St. Joseph.”
I reached for my phone. Avery had brought it from my apartment. I opened the spreadsheet.
Elias stared at the screen. His expression shifted—horror, anger, disbelief.
“$71,850,” he said quietly. “Moira, you gave them over $70,000.”
“I thought I was helping,” I said. “I thought they needed me.”
“They didn’t need you,” he replied firmly. “They used you.”
Then I showed him the group chat, the messages where I asked for help—seen, ignored—the photos Logan posted from Europe, the engagement message deleted after two hours of silence.
Elias was quiet for a long time. Then he took my hands.
“Listen to me. You don’t owe them anything. Not money, not your time, not forgiveness.”
His voice was steady, certain.
“They will never hurt you again. I promise.”
And for the first time in my life, I believed someone when they said that.
What I didn’t know was that my mother was about to expose herself.
But first, we uncovered something that shattered everything I thought I knew about my family.
On day six, Avery and I spent three hours documenting everything. Not for revenge—for clarity.
Venmo, Zelle, bank transfers. Every transaction, every message, every lie.
“You need this,” Avery said. “Not for them—for you. So you know you’re not crazy.”
We started with payment apps. 187 transfers to my mother, 143 to Logan. Total through apps alone: $52,100.
The first transfer: July 2019. Rent. Thanks honey.
The most recent: March 15, 2024. Emergency. Need $300.
Then we found the bank transfers—another $19,750 in direct deposits into their account. Most labeled family support, emergency, or loan will repay.
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