I nodded. “The pediatrician referred us to a child psychologist who specializes in trauma. Our first appointment is next week.”
“Good. Document everything—every therapy session, every nightmare, every way this assault has impacted her daily life. That documentation will be crucial not just for the criminal case, but also for any civil suit you decide to pursue.”
“Civil suit?” David asked.
“You can sue Eleanor for damages, medical expenses, therapy costs, pain and suffering, emotional distress. Given her employment situation, she probably doesn’t have significant assets, but winning a judgment would at least be on record. And if she ever does come into money, you could collect.”
We left Marcus’s office with a stack of paperwork and a timeline of what to expect. Eleanor’s arraignment had already happened. She had been released on bail with conditions that included no contact with our family and surrendering her passport. The preliminary hearing was scheduled for six weeks out.
David spent the next week making phone calls. He reached out to every family member who had ever hired Eleanor or given her access to money. The conversations were awkward and painful, dredging up incidents people had tried to forget or excuse.
Aunt Susan, his father’s sister, admitted that two thousand dollars had vanished from her late husband’s estate settlement. Eleanor had been helping sort through financial documents, and several checks meant for Susan had never been deposited. Susan had assumed they were lost or misplaced, and Margaret had convinced her not to make a fuss about it at such a difficult time.
Cousin Michael, who was in the military, revealed that Eleanor had house-sat for him during a deployment three years earlier. When he returned, his coin collection, worth approximately five thousand dollars, was gone. Eleanor claimed she had never seen it, suggesting someone must have broken in. Michael had filed a police report, but without evidence, nothing came of it. Again, Margaret had gotten involved, crying about false accusations and family loyalty.
The pattern was undeniable. For at least five years, Eleanor had been systematically stealing from family members, and Margaret had been covering for her every single time. She would manipulate the victims, convince them they were mistaken, play on family obligations and guilt. And it had worked—until Mia caught Eleanor in the act, and Eleanor’s violent response made denial impossible.
David compiled everything into a comprehensive document: dates, amounts, witness statements, any documentation that still existed. He sent copies to Marcus Vance, to the district attorney handling Eleanor’s case, and to Eleanor’s employer.
The response from her employer was swift. Eleanor worked as an administrative assistant at a marketing firm called Harrison and Associates. Two days after receiving David’s information, they launched an internal audit.
What they found was damning. For eighteen months, Eleanor had been skimming from the office petty cash fund. Small amounts at first—twenty or thirty dollars at a time—but growing bolder over time. In recent months, she had been taking a hundred dollars or more at a time. The total theft from her employer exceeded four thousand dollars.
Harrison and Associates fired Eleanor immediately and filed criminal charges. Suddenly, she wasn’t just facing one assault charge and one theft charge from our baby shower. She was looking at embezzlement from her employer, plus the thefts from family members who were now encouraged by David’s investigation, coming forward with police reports.
I watched my husband work with a kind of awe. David had always been the peacekeeper in his family, the one who smoothed over conflicts and made excuses for bad behavior. But something had broken in him when Eleanor hurt Mia. The man I had married wanted everyone to get along. The man sitting at our kitchen table building a criminal case against his own sister wanted justice, consequences, and accountability.
“Does this feel wrong to you?” I asked him one evening, watching him type another email to a family member requesting details about suspected theft. “Going after your own sister this hard?”
David looked up, his eyes meeting mine. “She hurt our daughter. She stole from us—from our baby. And when Mia called her out on it, Eleanor grabbed a weapon and attacked a six-year-old child with enough force to crack her skull. Then Mom tried to blame Mia for it.”
He shook his head slowly. “No, this doesn’t feel wrong. This feels like something I should have done years ago.”