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Three years earlier, my aunt Rebecca had died in a trucking accident outside Dayton. She had no children, no spouse, and—shockingly—had named me in a small private trust created from part of the settlement. Not because I was her favorite, but because I had taken her to chemo, handled her paperwork, and stayed by her side in the hospital when everyone else found excuses. The trust wasn’t large. After legal fees and taxes, it came to just under forty thousand dollars. But it was enough to fund graduate school if I used it wisely. The money had been placed in an account under my name with reporting restrictions. I could spend it on tuition, housing, books, transportation, and documented living costs. Large or irregular withdrawals triggered review.
Jason and my parents knew Aunt Rebecca had left me “something.” They didn’t understand how the account worked. They had simply assumed that money in my name was money they could pressure me into giving up.
At eight the next morning, I went to the downtown bank branch still wearing yesterday’s clothes. The branch manager, a gray-haired woman named Denise Harper, brought me into a private office. She reviewed the transactions, then asked for every detail. I told her about the stolen card, the confrontation, the eviction. Her expression grew serious when I explained the trust structure.
“Can I get the money back?”
“Possibly. We can reverse the wire if it hasn’t cleared. The cash withdrawals are more difficult, but we’ve already requested ATM footage.”
I nearly broke down right there.
“Do not speak to your family without counsel present,” he said. “If the account was tied to court-monitored disbursement conditions, they may have exposed themselves to more liability than they realize.”
“You called the bank?” he demanded.
“It was family money!”
“No,” I said. “It was protected money.”
Then he laughed, though it sounded strained. “You’re bluffing.”
He hung up.
Two days later, officers went to my parents’ house.
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