I started my investigation the next day while Jeffree was at work and Melanie was out meeting friends. I ransacked their bedroom. I know it was an invasion of privacy, but at that point I did not care about such moral subtleties.
I found interesting things. A folder with copies of my old will, where I left everything to Jeffrey. Notes about the estimated value of the house and the bakeries. Screenshots of conversations in a group chat called Plan S, where Melanie discussed with friends the best ways to obtain a power of attorney from elderly people. A friend of hers had recommended a lawyer specialized in that.
But what shocked me the most was a notebook Melanie kept hidden in the lingerie drawer. It was a diary where she noted strategies to manipulate me. It had things written like,
“Sophia gets more emotional and generous after talking about Richard. Use that.”
Or,
“Always ask for money when I am alone with her. Jeffree gets in the way by being weak.”
I read that with a mixture of horror and rage. Every page was proof of how Melanie had studied my behavior, my weaknesses, to better exploit me. She even noted the times I went out, the friends I saw, as if she were keeping surveillance.
I took photos of everything with my cell phone, every page of the notebook, every document in the folder, every screenshot of the conversation. I saved everything in a hidden folder on my computer and a copy in the cloud. If they wanted to play dirty, they would find out I could, too.
In the following days, I kept my normal routine, but with hawk eyes. I noticed Melanie going through my mail when she thought I was not looking. I saw Jeffrey making whispered calls on the balcony. I saw the two of them exchanging meaningful glances whenever I mentioned anything about my health.
One night during dinner, Melanie casually brought up that a friend of hers had taken her mother to a very good geriatrician who specialized in memory loss. She said it was important to get preventative checkups at my age. Jeffrey agreed too quickly, suggesting I schedule an appointment. I pretended to consider the idea, but inside I was laughing.
They were trying to plant the seed of the idea that I was becoming scenile, creating a narrative to eventually declare me incompetent. It was exactly the kind of move I had read in Melanie’s notebook.
That is when I had an idea. If they wanted to make me look like an idiot, I was going to play the part perfectly. I would give them exactly what they expected: a confused, vulnerable, increasingly dependent old lady. And while they thought they were winning, I would be building my trap.
I started slowly. I pretended to forget small things. I would ask the same question twice. I would leave the pot on the stove longer than usual. Nothing too obvious, just enough to feed their narrative. Melanie took the bait immediately. She started commenting to Jeffrey, loud enough for me to hear, about my confusions. Jeffrey also joined the game, suggesting that perhaps I needed help managing the bakery’s accounts because it was becoming too complicated for me.
On the outside, I nodded, feigning self-concern. Inside, I was documenting everything. I recorded conversations, noted dates and times, and saved evidence. Every move they made was being recorded. Every word was being archived.
I also discreetly hired a private investigator. I wanted to know exactly what Jeffrey and Melanie were doing when they were not home, who they were talking to, and where they were going. The detective, an ex-cop named Mitch, was efficient and discreet. Two weeks later, Mitch brought me a report that confirmed my worst suspicions and revealed things I had not even imagined.
Mitch met me at a coffee shop far from my neighborhood, away from any possibility of running into Jeffrey or Melanie. He carried a thick folder and an expression that mixed professionalism with pity. That already told me the news would not be good.
The report started with the basics: Jeffrey and Melany’s routine, places they frequented, and people they met. But it quickly became clear that much more was going on than I had imagined.
First, the apartment. They had not cancelled the old lease as they claimed. In fact, they had renewed the contract and used the place regularly, several times a week. Mitch had photos of them entering and leaving, always carrying expensive shopping bags, imported wine bottles, and boxes from sophisticated restaurants. Essentially, they were living in my house for free, eating my food, using my facilities, but keeping the apartment as a secret retreat where they indulged in a luxury lifestyle with the money they were stealing from me. The hypocrisy left me breathless.
But there was more. Mitch had discovered that Melanie did not work, contrary to what she always implied. The outings to meet clients were actually afternoons at spars, expensive hair salons, and luxury malls. She was spending my money getting pampered as if she were a society lady, while I, the true owner of the fortune, lived modestly.
The report also revealed frequent meetings with a man named Julian Perez. He was a lawyer specializing in family and probate law, particularly in cases of legal incapacitation and guardianship of the elderly. Mitch had managed to confirm through a source at the firm that Melanie had consulted Julian about the procedures for obtaining legal guardianship over someone deemed incompetent.
Mitch turned another page, and his tone became even more serious. He had discovered something about Melany’s past that Jeffrey probably did not know. Before marrying my son, Melanie had been married to a 72-year-old gentleman for only 11 months. The man had died of natural causes and had left her a considerable inheritance. At the time, the deceased’s family tried to contest the will, claiming that Melanie had manipulated the elderly man, but they failed to prove anything. She walked away with almost half a million dollars clean. Two years later, she met Jeffrey on a dating app. A young man, the only son of a rich widow. The coincidence was too unsettling to ignore.
I was not dealing with a common opportunist daughter-in-law. I was dealing with someone who had experience in manipulating older people to obtain inheritances, someone who had practically turned it into a profession. And my son, my Jeffrey, was either a conscious accomplice or a useful tool in her hands.
Mitch showed me photos of this Julian, a man in his 40s, well-dressed, with the heir of someone who knows exactly how the system works and how to exploit it. Apparently, he had a history of helping families gain guardianship over elderly relatives, always for exorbitant fees. His firm specialized in this lucrative and morally questionable niche.
I asked Mitch to continue investigating, especially focusing on any contact between Melanie and people from her first marriage and any suspicious financial movements. He agreed and promised to have more information in two weeks.
I left that coffee shop with the report hidden in my purse and crystal clear clarity in my mind. Melanie was not simply an opportunistic freeloader who saw a chance and took it. She was a professional predator who had chosen my son and, through him, me as deliberate targets. And Jeffrey, my own flesh and blood, had accepted that role, whether out of greed, weakness, or a combination of both.
That night, I could not eat dinner with them. I faked a headache and went up early. But in reality, I stayed in my room, analyzing every page of Mitch’s report, connecting the dots, understanding the extent of the trap I had fallen into. They had a long-term plan. First, empty my accounts through loans and diversions. Second, create a narrative of mental decline. Third, use Julian to obtain legal guardianship, and then, with total control over my finances and person, turn me into an empty shell while they lived off my fortune until I died naturally or, who knows, with a little help.
The memory of the conversation I overheard about when I was going to die and if they could speed things up gained a new, more sinister weight. With Melanie’s history of a conveniently early dying elderly husband, it was not paranoia to consider that she might be planning something similar with me.
I made a decision right there. I was not going to simply defend myself. I was going to counterattack. I was going to use every piece of information I had, every piece of evidence Mitch gathered, every mistake they made to turn the tables completely. When I was done with them, Jeffrey and Melanie would understand the true meaning of messing with the wrong person.
I started with the obvious: changing my will. I scheduled a meeting with my trusted lawyer, Dr. Arnold Turner, who had handled the bakery’s legal matters for years. I went to his office on a day Jeffrey was traveling for work, and Melanie had supposedly gone to visit her mother. Dr. Arnold received me with his usual care, offering coffee and asking about my health. When I explained that I wanted to make significant changes to the will, he took paper and pen with an attentive expression.
First, I removed Jeffrey as the universal heir. In his place, I divided my assets so that the bakeries and half the money would go to a charity foundation that helps underprivileged children. The house and the other half of the money would go to my nephew Ryan, my deceased sister’s son, a serious and hard-working young man who always kept in touch with me without financial interest. Jeffrey would inherit only a symbolic amount of $100,000, enough so he could not contest the will, claiming he was forgotten, but small enough to make my dissatisfaction clear. And I left an explanatory letter, sealed, to be opened only after my death, detailing the reasons for my decision.
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