They said nothing after that.
They didn’t know that during my ride from the airport I had already spoken with a family court clerk about the seriousness of cases involving minors being forced out without parental consent. They didn’t know Mrs. Donnelly had written a statement confirming she found Emma crying on the porch that morning.
They didn’t know my mother’s text had already been forwarded to my lawyer.
Eventually my mother sank back into her chair.
“We were trying to help Tyler.”
“And you chose to hurt Emma to do it,” I replied.
Later that night Emma and I left with her belongings packed.
As we drove away, she looked straight ahead and asked quietly, “They weren’t allowed to do that… right?”
I tightened my grip on the steering wheel.
“No,” I said gently. “They weren’t.”
That was the first moment all day when her breathing finally relaxed.
The months that followed were difficult. My parents told relatives I had used lawyers to intimidate them over a simple misunderstanding. But the evidence told a different story.
There was the note.
There were the messages.
There was Mrs. Donnelly’s statement.