The Crypto Wallet Was Empty, But the Bank Camera Showed Who Really Drained Mom-QuynhTranJP

The blue light pulsed across Mom’s kitchen window in slow, cold strips.

Once. Twice. Then again.

Tyler’s keys stopped jingling in his pocket. The rain kept ticking against the glass over the sink, and the old refrigerator coughed once behind me like it had been holding its breath too long.

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Mom did not look at the window.

She looked at the phone in my hand.

Officer Daniels’s message still glowed on the screen: “We have the bank footage. Do not let him leave.”

Tyler swallowed. The sound was small, dry, and sharp.

“Sarah,” he said, his voice suddenly soft. “Unlock the door.”

I slid Dad’s brass key into the pocket of my jeans. The metal was warm from my palm.

“No.”

For ten years, that kitchen had been my second job.

I knew the cabinet hinge that squealed above the stove. I knew the drawer that stuck unless you lifted it half an inch. I knew which burner ran too hot, which window leaked during storms, and which days Mom pretended not to need groceries because she hated watching me carry in bags from Costco after a twelve-hour shift.

After Dad died, the house became a mouth that never stopped asking for money.

A water heater in January. A roof patch in March. A sewer line in August. A property tax bill that made Mom sit at the table with both hands wrapped around a calculator she barely knew how to use.

Tyler came over for birthdays, holidays, and emergencies with dollar signs attached.

I came over with receipts.

At first, Mom called it a season.

“Your brother is just finding himself,” she would say, stirring coffee so hard the spoon clicked against the mug.

Finding himself cost $3,200 for a business coach. Then $11,000 for a truck repair that never happened. Then $6,750 for a trading course with a man on YouTube who wore sunglasses indoors.

When Dad was alive, he could still say no.

After the funeral, no became my job, and Mom hated me for wearing it.

Fourteen months before the blue lights, Tyler tried to add himself to her checking account at a branch in Frisco. The teller called me because Mom had listed me as emergency contact after her hip surgery. By the time I got there, Tyler was standing in the lobby with his hands raised like he was the victim of a misunderstanding.

“She wanted convenience,” he said.

Mom sat in a chair by the brochure rack, cheeks red, purse clutched to her ribs.

That afternoon, I drove her to an estate attorney in Plano. The office smelled like printer toner and old leather. Mom signed the durable power of attorney with her mouth pinched tight and her shoulders stiff.

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