While I lay paralyzed in the hospital, my oldest daughter drained my $88K life savings for a “startup.” My youngest cried for me, but I told her with a smile, “Let her have it.” My oldest mocked me, thinking I was senile. She didn’t know that my will had a “greed clause”. She got her $88K, but she just lost the empire.
“LEAVE ME THE SCRAPS, MOTHER, I’M TAKING THE FUTURE,” my oldest daughter hissed while my body lay as still as a tombstone.
She thought she was robbing a senile old woman of her last $88,000, but she was actually signing the death warrant for her own inheritance.
The air in the private suite at St. Jude’s Medical Center always smelled the same: chilled ozone, expensive lilies, and the underlying, metallic scent of mortality. I lay beneath the heavy, starch-white sheets, a prisoner in my own flesh. The stroke had hit me like a gavel striking a sounding block—swift, decisive, and silencing. To the casual observer, Eleanor Vance was finished. A withered husk of eighty years, hooked up to a rhythmic ventilator that breathed for me: hiss-click, hiss-click.