Part2: When my son sl:apped me for interrupting his video game, I just lowered my head and walked to the kitchen. I spent three hours baking his favorite triple-chocolate cake

Part 2

I baked his favorite triple-chocolate cake because monsters are easiest to trap when they believe they’re being rewarded.

The kitchen slowly filled with the scent of cocoa, butter, and warm ganache. I brewed artisan coffee using beans I usually saved for Christmas mornings. I moved carefully, almost tenderly, while the bruise on my cheek darkened into a purple crescent.

Upstairs, Evan screamed into his headset.

“Trash team! Absolute garbage!”

Marissa wandered downstairs once, barefoot and holding her phone. She stopped when she noticed the cake cooling on the rack.

“Oh,” she said slowly. “So you’re not mad?”

I smiled without showing my teeth. “Would anger help?”

She rolled her eyes. “Honestly, you should appreciate that Evan still lives here. Most sons leave and forget their moms.”

“Does he?”

She frowned. “Does he what?”

“Stay here for me?”

Her expression tightened immediately. “Don’t twist things around. He’s stressed. Gaming can become a real career now. You wouldn’t understand.”

No.

I probably wouldn’t understand a “career” financed by my pension withdrawals and grocery budget.

Marissa drifted closer to the kitchen island, sweet synthetic perfume surrounding her like fake confidence.

“Evan says you’re changing your will,” she said casually.

There it was.

The tiny knife hidden beneath silk.

I poured batter into another cake pan. “He talks about my will?”

“He worries about you. You’re alone. Forgetful. Emotional.” She tapped her long red nail against the countertop. “Women like you get taken advantage of.”

I laughed softly.

She blinked. “What’s funny?”

“Nothing.”

But something absolutely was funny.

They believed they targeted a lonely old woman.

Instead, they targeted someone who spent half her career tracing stolen assets through shell companies, forged signatures, fake invoices, and smiling liars in expensive suits.

Two weeks earlier, my attorney called about a suspicious online document requesting transfer of power of attorney over my financial accounts to Evan. My signature had been uploaded. So had a scanned copy of my driver’s license.

The forgery was close.

Just not close enough.

I already filed a fraud report. I already secured my accounts. I already installed a hallway security camera after the pantry incident. And this morning’s slap had been recorded from two separate angles — audio included.

Still, I baked.

At 2:17 p.m., my doctor emailed the medical report.

Soft tissue trauma. Bruising consistent with an open-handed strike. Possible inner-ear injury.

At 2:41 p.m., my attorney texted:

Officers are on the way. Do not confront him alone.

At 2:53 p.m., two uniformed police officers sat quietly at my kitchen island accepting coffee with the exhausted politeness of men who had seen too many broken homes.

Officer Grant, broad-shouldered and calm, flipped through the medical report while Officer Lewis watched the hallway.

“He’s upstairs?” Grant asked.

“Yes.”

“And the girlfriend?”

“With him.”

I carefully placed the cake beneath a glass dome. My hands no longer shook.

From upstairs, Evan shouted, “Mom! Coffee smells amazing!”

Marissa laughed.

Officer Lewis raised one eyebrow.

I poured fresh coffee into two mugs and whispered softly,

“Let him come downstairs smiling.”

 

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