He planned it.
He knew my mother’s weaknesses—her sleepwalking, her mental health struggles—and turned them into weapons.
He didn’t just commit murder.
He built a story the world was ready to believe.
And we all believed it.
Even me.
I saw him one last time before they took him away.
He sat in a gray room, smaller than I remembered, but still carrying that same bitterness.
“Why?” I asked.
He didn’t hesitate.
“Because your father was in the way.”
No regret. No shame.
Just resentment.
“You all needed someone to blame,” he added. “I just gave you one.”
I felt anger rise—but it didn’t consume me.
Because for the first time, I saw him clearly.
Not as family.
Not as authority.
Just as what he really was.
My mother walked out of prison three days later.
No cameras. No applause.
Just silence… and sunlight.
Matthew ran to her first.