I’m the only one who looks after my mom, Joyce, 79. After a bad fall, I made the hardest decision of my life. I placed her in a nursing home because I was terrified she’d get hurt again when I was at work.
But I NEVER ABANDONED HER. Every weekend, I’d visit with fresh muffins, paint her nails, and decorate her room with photos. But last Saturday, I walked in with banana bread and a cardigan—and the receptionist blinked.
“Mrs. Joyce? She’s NOT HERE anymore.
She was DISCHARGED last week. A woman nicked her out and said that you sent her.”
My hands went numb. The tin of banana bread clattered to the floor.
“What do you mean she’s not here? I didn’t authorize anything.” I could hear my own voice shaking. The receptionist, a younger woman named Lacie, looked genuinely confused.
“She had paperwork,” she said, flipping through a clipboard. “Said her name was Kinsey? She showed us a signed release form.”
Kinsey.
I hadn’t heard that name in five years. My cousin—Mom’s late sister’s daughter. We weren’t close.
In fact, the last time she visited was at Uncle Daryl’s funeral. She barely said a word to my mom. My mind was racing.
I asked Lacie for a copy of the discharge papers. She hesitated but eventually printed out the form. There was a signature next to my name—but it wasn’t mine.
It looked like a kid had tried to imitate cursive. “I didn’t sign this. That’s not my handwriting,” I said, trying not to panic.
“Did anyone verify with me before letting her go?”
Lacie swallowed hard. “There was a call…from your number. It came through our front desk phone.
That’s why we didn’t question it.”
I stared at her, stunned. Someone must’ve spoofed my number. I rushed out, didn’t even grab the bread.
In the car, I called Kinsey. The number I had was disconnected. Next, I tried calling Mom’s old house.
No answer. I even drove by—but it looked empty. Shutters drawn, no lights on.
I called the police. At first, they treated it like a misunderstanding. A “family matter.” They told me to calm down.
“Maybe your cousin just wanted to help,” one officer said. But I knew better. I knew how Kinsey operated.
She’d always been quick with charm and quicker with schemes. In her twenties, she sold knock-off makeup online, scamming half the neighborhood. In her thirties, she was in and out of jobs and relationships, always “finding herself.” Last I heard, she was broke, couch-surfing.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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