After my dad died, it was just me and Mom. She grieved quietly but deeply, and for years, I watched her carry that loneliness. So when Robert moved in next door and began courting her with flowers, sweet gestures, and charm, I was thrilled. He seemed perfect—attentive, respectful, even thoughtful toward me. Within a year, they married. But after the wedding, things changed fast. My mom stopped dressing up, smiling, or coming to brunch. She became quiet, withdrawn. When I asked her about it, she brushed it off as “adjusting.” But something felt wrong. One day,
I dropped by unexpectedly—and found Robert stuffing her colorful dresses into trash bags. My mom sat silently, a tear slipping down her cheek. He claimed she asked him to do it, but her eyes told the truth: he was controlling her. That night, I made a plan. A few days later, I lured Robert into thinking I was grateful for all he’d done and whisked Mom away for a “girls’ night”—which became a weekend escape. I told her she wasn’t going back,