“The debt consolidation notices were sent automatically when the court filing was processed,” she continued. “Michael’s creditors have thirty days to demand payment.”
I sat perfectly still after I hung up, hands resting in my lap, hearing the faint hum of the refrigerator and the distant bark of a dog outside.
By two p.m., my phone was ringing constantly.
Michael called four times.
Voicemail after voicemail.
Each one more frantic.
By the fourth call, his voice was shaking.
“Mom, something crazy is happening with my mortgage,” he said. “The bank is saying they need to review my loan terms immediately.”
At seven, my doorbell rang.
I wheeled to the door and opened it.
Michael and Ashley stood on my porch.
Michael looked like he hadn’t slept in a week. His eyes were bloodshot, his face drawn. Ashley’s polished composure had cracks in it. Her smile was gone, replaced by a tight, desperate expression.
“Mom,” Michael blurted, “we need to talk. Something’s gone wrong with my loans.”
His voice cracked on the last word.
“Every bank, every credit company,” he continued, hands lifting in helpless gestures, “they’re demanding immediate payment. They’re saying I guaranteed debts I never even heard of, that Dad co-signed loan guarantees for over four hundred thousand. But that can’t be right, can it?”
I looked at him and felt something settle inside me.
Not rage.
Not satisfaction.
A strange calm.
“Your father handled all the financial matters,” I said, voice even. “I rarely knew what he was doing with investments and business arrangements.”
Ashley stepped forward, desperation sharpening her words.
“Helen, this is serious,” she said. “If these guarantees are real, we could lose everything. The house, the cars, everything.”
I nodded slightly, as if acknowledging a sad fact about weather.
“I’m sorry to hear that,” I said.
Ashley’s voice rose, losing its controlled tone.
“Helen, this affects you too,” she snapped. “If Michael loses his house, where do you think you’re going to live when you can’t take care of yourself anymore?”
Interesting.
Yesterday I was too much of a burden to stay in their guest room.
Today I was part of their long-term housing plan.
Michael stared at me, confusion and suspicion mixing on his face.
“Mom,” he said, “did you hire a lawyer? Because someone filed papers opposing my competency petition, and they seem to know an awful lot about my personal finances.”
I watched his face, watched the way his eyes searched mine.
“I’m represented by Meridian Legal Services,” I said.
His mouth fell open slightly.
“Meridian?” he repeated. “Mom, those guys charge five hundred an hour. How are you paying for that?”
“I’m managing my affairs just fine,” I said.
Ashley stepped forward again, anger now replacing fear. “This is ridiculous,” she snapped. “Helen, whatever games you’re playing need to stop right now. Michael was trying to help you.”
I held her gaze, and my voice came out quiet, sharp.
“I think you should have thought about the consequences,” I said, “before you decided to have your disabled mother declared mentally incompetent so you could access her bank accounts.”
The silence that followed was heavy.
Michael’s face drained of color.
Ashley’s eyes widened.
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