After my husband’s funeral, I went to my sister’s son’s first birthday party. She announced, «My son is your husband’s child. So as inheritance, I’ll take half of your $800,000 house.» She even showed me his will. I said, «Oh, I see,» and tried to hold back my laughter.
I showed him the documents from the safety deposit box: the medical records confirming Adam’s vasectomy, the legitimate will, and Adam’s journal documenting Cassandra’s behavior over the years.
«Adam was nothing if not thorough,» James said, reviewing the materials. «These medical records alone disprove her claim about Lucas’s paternity. The vasectomy was performed two years before the child was conceived. It is biologically impossible for Adam to be the father.»
«What should I do?» I asked. «I do not want to humiliate her publicly, but I cannot let her take half of our home based on a lie.»
James leaned back in his chair, considering. «First, we need more information. I recommend hiring a private investigator to look into Cassandra’s current situation. There is likely a motivation beyond simple cruelty here. People rarely attempt fraud of this nature without financial pressure.»
He recommended Frank Delaney, a former police detective who now worked as a private investigator, often on cases for the firm.
I agreed, and James made the call immediately, explaining the situation in broad strokes. Frank arrived an hour later, a stocky man with a Boston accent and no-nonsense attitude. He took detailed notes as I explained the situation, asking pointed questions about Cassandra’s relationship history, employment, and financial status.
I realized how little I actually knew about my sister’s current circumstances. We had grown further apart since Lucas’s birth, with my attempts to be involved as an aunt often rebuffed or taken for granted.
«I will need a few days,» Frank said when I had finished. «My preliminary focus will be on her financial situation and relationship with the child’s actual father. Is there anything else you can tell me about him?»
I shared what little I knew about Tyler, the bartender Cassandra had been dating when she became pregnant. I had only met him a handful of times, and he had seemed uninterested in family gatherings.
«Last I heard, they were still together, but she rarely mentions him anymore,» I said. «He was not at the party yesterday, which I thought was strange for the father of the birthday boy.»
Frank nodded, making another note. «That is a good starting point. I will be in touch soon.»
Three days later, Frank called, requesting a meeting at James’s office. When I arrived, both men were reviewing documents spread across the conference table.
«Mrs. Preston,» Frank began once we were seated. «I have uncovered some concerning information about your sister’s situation.»
According to his investigation, Cassandra was in dire financial straits. She had accumulated over $75,000 in debt, spread across credit cards, personal loans, and medical bills for Lucas, who had needed surgery for a heart defect shortly after birth. Her credit score was abysmal, and she had been rejected for three additional loans in the past month alone.
«She is also facing eviction,» Frank continued, sliding a document across the table. «This is a copy of the notice her landlord filed last week. She has until the end of the month to pay four months of back rent or vacate the property.»
As for Tyler, he had apparently abandoned Cassandra and Lucas shortly after the birth, moving to Seattle with a new girlfriend. He was paying minimal child support, barely $200 a month, and even that irregularly.
«I also found these,» Frank said, producing printouts of text messages. «She has been telling friends about her plans to claim part of your house for weeks. These are messages between her and a friend named Jenna.»
I recognized the name as the woman who had opened the door at the party. The messages were damning.
«Adam’s death is terrible but maybe it’s finally my chance to get what I deserve. That house is worth at least 800k now. If I play this right, I’ll have a nice nest egg for Lucas and me.»
«The will is almost ready. My friend Dave is good with Photoshop and found a sample of Adam’s signature online from some charity auction. It looks totally legit.»
«Bridget has always been the golden child. Time for me to get my share. She got 11 years with a great guy. The least she can do is share the wealth now that he’s gone.»
I felt physically ill reading the calculated coldness of my sister’s words. This was not just opportunism. It was premeditated fraud designed to capitalize on my grief.
«There is more,» Frank said gently. «I ran a background check on Tyler Martin, the actual father. He has a history of domestic violence charges from a previous relationship and currently has a warrant out for unpaid child support for another child in New Hampshire. He is not someone you would want around your nephew.»
I sat in stunned silence, trying to process everything. My sister was not just desperate. She was willing to destroy Adam’s reputation and our marriage to solve her financial problems, and her choice in partners had put Lucas in a potentially dangerous situation.
«What do I do with all this?» I asked, looking between James and Frank. «I cannot just expose all of this publicly. Lucas is innocent in all of this. He is still my nephew.»
James removed his glasses, rubbing the bridge of his nose. «You have several options, Bridget. We could file charges against Cassandra for attempted fraud and forgery. That would likely result in criminal penalties for her, possibly even jail time, given the amount of money involved.»
«Or,» he continued, seeing my distress, «we could handle this privately. Confront her with the evidence, require her to retract her claims, and potentially work out an arrangement that protects both you and the child.»
I left the meeting with a heavy heart and a folder full of evidence. That evening, I called my therapist, Dr. Laurel Chen, whom I had been seeing since Adam’s death, and scheduled an emergency session.
In her calm, plant-filled office, I unloaded the entire situation. «I am so angry I can barely see straight,» I admitted. «But Lucas is just a baby. None of this is his fault. And despite everything, Cassandra is still my sister.»
Dr. Chen listened attentively, asking occasional questions about my relationship with Cassandra throughout our lives. «It sounds like this pattern of competition and manipulation has existed since childhood,» she observed. «The current situation is an escalation, not an anomaly.»
«What would you do?» I asked desperately.
«I cannot tell you what decision to make,» she replied. «But I will say that compassion does not mean allowing yourself to be victimized. You can be kind while still establishing firm boundaries and consequences.»
After much reflection, I decided on a course of action. I would confront Cassandra privately with all the evidence, offering her a choice: face potential legal consequences for her fraud, or accept a compromise that would provide for Lucas while requiring accountability from her.
With renewed determination, I called Cassandra the next morning. «We need to talk about the will,» I said when she answered. «Can you come to my house tomorrow afternoon? Just you, not Lucas.»
«I knew you would come around,» she replied, sounding smugly satisfied. «I will be there at 2.»
I spent the morning preparing for Cassandra’s visit, arranging documents in a logical order and setting up recording devices on James’s advice. «Massachusetts is a two-party consent state,» he had warned me, «so you cannot record her secretly. But you can ask for her permission at the start of your conversation, framing it as a way to ensure you both have a record of any agreement reached.»
At precisely 2 o’clock, the doorbell rang. I took a deep breath, steadying myself before opening the door.
Cassandra stood on the porch, looking polished in a new outfit, her confidence evident in her posture. «Come in,» I said, leading her to the living room. I had set up two chairs facing each other, a coffee table between them with a recorder, water glasses, and a folder of documents.
«I hope you do not mind if we record our conversation. It seems prudent given the legal nature of what we are discussing.»
Cassandra hesitated only briefly before nodding. «Sure, whatever makes you comfortable. Though I think this can be pretty straightforward; the will is clear.»
I turned on the recorder, stating the date and time and confirming Cassandra’s consent to be recorded. Then I sat back, studying my sister’s face. «Before we discuss the will, I would like to understand exactly what you are claiming happened between you and Adam.»
Cassandra launched into a well-rehearsed story about a supposed affair two years ago. According to her version, she and Adam had connected during a period when he and I were «having problems.» She claimed they met several times at a hotel downtown, that Adam had confessed his unhappiness in our marriage, and that Lucas was conceived during these encounters.
«He always meant to tell you,» she said, her eyes wide with practiced sincerity. «But then, Lucas was born with the heart condition, and he did not want to add stress to the situation. He promised he would provide for his son, though.»
I listened without interrupting, noting the inconsistencies in her timeline and the details that contradicted what I knew about Adam during that period. When she finished, I began asking questions.
«Which hotel did you meet at?» I asked.
«The Mandarin Oriental,» she replied quickly.
«And what room? Do you remember?»
She faltered slightly. «It was on a high floor. I do not recall the exact number.»
«What days of the week did you usually meet? Tuesdays? Sometimes Thursdays? When he told you he was working late?»
I continued with increasingly specific questions. «What did Adam typically order from room service? What side of the bed did he prefer? Did he shower before or after?» Details that only someone who had actually been intimate with Adam would know.
Cassandra grew increasingly flustered, her answers becoming vague or contradictory. «Why does any of this matter?» she finally snapped. «The point is that Lucas is Adam’s son, and the will proves Adam wanted to provide for him.»
«Actually,» I said calmly, opening my folder, «both of those claims are demonstrably false.»
I placed the medical records on the table between us. «Two years before Lucas was conceived, Adam had a vasectomy following surgery for a varicocele. It was completely successful, confirmed by follow-up tests. It was physically impossible for him to father a child after that procedure.»
Cassandra’s face drained of color. She picked up the medical records with trembling hands, scanning the clinical language and dates. «These could be faked,» she said weakly.
«They are not,» I replied. «And Adam’s doctor is prepared to testify to their authenticity if necessary. But that is just the beginning.»
Next, I produced the legitimate will, notarized and properly filed with the court. «This is Adam’s actual will, prepared by James Wilson and witnessed by two partners at his firm. As you can see, it leaves everything to me, with no mention of Lucas.»
Cassandra’s confidence was visibly crumbling, but she attempted to rally. «He must have changed it after this was drawn up. The will I have is more recent.»
«The will you have,» I said evenly, «is a forgery. A poor one, I might add. James has already identified multiple legal inconsistencies in the language, and the signature is clearly fake. Creating a fraudulent will is a felony in Massachusetts, punishable by up to 5 years in prison.»
I continued methodically, presenting evidence: Adam’s journal documenting her inappropriate advances, the text messages between her and Jenna discussing the plan, and finally, the report from Frank’s investigation detailing her financial troubles, eviction notice, and Tyler’s abandonment.
«We know everything, Cassandra,» I said as she sat in stunned silence. «The question now is what happens next.»
For a long moment, she did not speak. Then, to my surprise, she began to cry. Not the theatrical tears I had seen her use to manipulate our parents, but deep, body-racking sobs.
