She didn’t call me.
She called them.
“Your sons are in trouble,” she told them with a trembling voice convincing enough to fool a judge. “There’s a criminal case. A mistake in the system. They need money to keep them out of jail. And you must not tell them — it could ruin their only chance.”
She brought them forged documents, complete with court seals and case numbers. She said the bail had to be paid immediately. She said their house — the home I had given them — needed to be transferred temporarily so she could “unlock liquidity.”
She told them everything would be reversed once the crisis passed.
And so, with hands shaking, they signed their home away.
Then She Told Them to Run
After the fraudulent “bail” was supposedly paid, she warned them:
“Scammers now know where you live. You must leave the house immediately. Don’t tell your son — they might target him too.”
My parents believed every word.
Claudia moved them across the city into a room so small they could barely lie down without touching opposite walls. She handed them cash in envelopes — just enough to survive but never enough to ask questions.
Meanwhile, she stood beside me every day, smiling, asking how my parents were, reassuring me that they were “doing fine.”
She was selling their house.
She was draining my accounts.
And she was looking me in the eyes while doing it.
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