Mrs. Evelyn looked at her with a venomous tenderness. “I did it for your brother.”
The words landed like a gavel. Richard snapped his head up. “For me?”
“Yes!” she screamed. “Because that woman stole you from me! Because since she got here, you don’t come over for Sunday dinner every single week. You don’t tell me everything anymore. You don’t hand your entire paycheck over for me to manage! You don’t obey me!”
“Mom, I’m thirty-eight years old.” “And you are still my son!” “I am not your property.”
She stared at him as if he had just deeply insulted her. “I gave birth to you. I sacrificed everything for you. I know what kind of woman is right for you.”
I let out an involuntary laugh. Mrs. Evelyn snapped her gaze to me. “What are you laughing at, you miserable girl?”
“The fact that you didn’t even pretend this was my fault. It was always about you losing control over him.”
She tried to lunge at me, but Patricia held her back.
The stranger began to whimper. “Sir, let me explain. Your mom paid me three hundred dollars. She told me her daughter-in-law was awful, that I just needed to scare her. I didn’t know about the soup.”
“What’s your name?” I demanded. “Marcus.” “Full name.” He stayed quiet. Mr. Harrison blocked his path. “Full name, young man.” Marcus gave it. I recorded that too.
While we waited for the police, I called the domestic violence hotline. The advocate who answered didn’t ask if I was overreacting. She gathered the details, told me to preserve the soup, save the video file, and stay close to the neighbors until officers arrived. Her voice was steady and human—a lifeline thrown into a house full of vipers.
Richard remained frozen. I watched him look at his mother, then at me. His world was tearing apart, yes, but mine had been in pieces for years.
Mrs. Evelyn sat down on the bed. My bed.
“Son,” she said, her voice dropping its screech. “I didn’t want to hurt her. I just wanted you to see who she really was.”
Richard let out a broken laugh. “But the only person caught on camera was you.”
She wept harder. “You’re going to abandon me for a woman.”
Right then, something inside me clicked off. Not against her. Against him.
Because even now, with the video, with the bowl, with a strange man in my bedroom, Mrs. Evelyn was still placing the ultimate decision in his hands. As if my personal safety depended on Richard finally choosing correctly.
I walked over to the closet. I pulled out a suitcase.
Richard blinked. “What are you doing?” “I’m leaving.” “Natalia, wait. We need to talk.” “No. You need to talk to the police, to your family, and to your conscience. I need to go somewhere where nobody drugs me at dinner.” “But I didn’t know.”
I paused. “That’s the entire problem, Richard. You didn’t know because you chose not to know.”
His eyes welled with tears. “I swear to God, I never imagined my mom would stoop to this.”
“And I never imagined marrying a man who needed a video recording to believe his own wife.”
The police arrived fifteen minutes later, along with a victim advocate. They separated everyone. They processed the soup, the napkin, and the video, and asked if I needed a medical evaluation. I said yes, though I hated the sound of my own voice trembling.
Mrs. Evelyn completely transformed in front of the officers. “Officer, I am an elderly woman. My daughter-in-law is unstable. She hates me.”
The advocate cut her off. “Ma’am, on the audio recording, you clearly state that you put something in her food.”
Evelyn went dead silent.
It was beautiful in a terrible sort of way. For years, her word carried more weight than mine. Tonight, her own voice betrayed her.
They took us down to the precinct to file formal statements. It wasn’t a quick or clean process. It was hours of cold hallways, exhausting paperwork, and a room that smelled of burnt coffee and old files. I underwent a medical evaluation. I handed over the evidence. They kept a copy of the footage. Marcus ended up fully confessing, explaining that Evelyn had contacted him through an acquaintance at an auto repair shop and promised him a payout once I was driven out of the house.
Richard stayed outside the interview rooms almost the entire time. By the time we finally walked out, dawn was breaking.
The city was waking up. Outside the precinct, a breakfast truck was setting up. The steam rose into the chilly morning air as if nothing out of the ordinary had occurred. That’s the city for you: you can step right out of a living nightmare and find someone asking if you want your coffee black or with cream.
Richard approached me, his eyes bloodshot. “My mom is being detained for a few hours. They are continuing the investigation.”
I didn’t reply.
“Natalia, please. Let me take you home.”
I looked at him. “To what home? The one your mother claimed wasn’t mine? To the bedroom where they paid a man to lie over my body? To the kitchen where I was served a bowl of pills?”
He broke down. “I don’t know what to say.” “Start by not asking me to go back.”
My sister arrived in a cab. I hadn’t told her everything, just enough. When she saw me, she hugged me so tightly my ribs almost ached. She smelled like clean clothes, familiar comfort—like family that actually protects you.
“Let’s go,” she said.
Richard tried to stop me. “Natalia, I love you.”
It hurt. Because I loved him too. That was the worst part of it. Love doesn’t just vanish because someone failed to look after you. Sometimes it just sits there amidst the wreckage, hoping you’ll be foolish all over again.
“Maybe you do,” I told him. “But you didn’t believe me.”
I got into the cab. I didn’t look back until we turned the corner