They threw me out into the heat with two feverish babies and an empty bottle… three months after my parents’ funeral, a lawyer whispered: ‘Your parents didn’t die by accident.’ So why was my uncle already smiling outside the courtroom?
They weren’t thrilled about us.
Caleb barely spoke to me.
Noah kept asking if this was “temporary.”
I knew what that meant.
Temporary meant: don’t get attached.
Still… Ethan took us in.
His home wasn’t perfect—but it felt safe.
Warm. Lived-in.
There were grocery lists on the fridge. Family photos on the walls.
And a golden retriever named Scout who slept outside the babies’ room that first night, like he understood they needed protecting.
For the first time since my parents died…
I cried without hiding.
Then the threats began.
Uncle Ray and Diane hired a lawyer and accused Ethan of kidnapping.
Suddenly, people started changing their stories.
A nurse claimed Ethan had acted “suspiciously.”
Investigations reopened.
And one day, I overheard something that made my blood run cold:
“…once custody is restored, we can finally access the inheritance.”
Inheritance.
That’s when I understood.
This was never about family.
It was about money.
My parents had left behind life insurance, a paid-off house, and a trust for me and my brothers.
Uncle Ray didn’t take us in out of love.
He took us in because we were worth something.
Then Detective Elena Ramirez showed up.
She asked careful questions.
About the accident.
About Uncle Ray’s shop.
About whether he’d ever worked on my parents’ car.
And suddenly, I remembered something:
Three days before the crash, my dad had argued with him.
Something about “borrowing against the kids’ future.”
Everything changed after that.
Security footage showed Diane secretly paying off the nurse who changed her statement.
And a hidden mechanical report revealed something far worse:
The brake lines in my parents’ car had been tampered with.
If my uncle wanted our inheritance badly enough to lie…
to manipulate…
to throw us out like trash…
