Two days after I paid for my son’s wedding, the restaurant manager called and told me not to put him on speaker.
That was how I knew something was wrong.
Tony Russo had managed the Gilded Oak for years. He had handled arrogant executives, spoiled brides, furious officials, and rich men who thought money made them untouchable. Tony did not scare easily. So when his voice trembled, I listened.
“Mr. Barnes,” he said quietly, “please don’t put this on speaker. You need to come here alone. And whatever you do, don’t tell your wife.”
I was sitting at my kitchen table, staring at cold coffee while my wife, Beatrice, arranged white lilies at the sink. She looked peaceful, devoted, exactly like the woman everyone believed she was.
“I’ll be there in twenty minutes,” I said.
Beatrice turned. “Who was that?”
“Pharmacy,” I lied. “Something about my blood pressure prescription.”
Her eyes narrowed slightly. Yesterday, I would not have noticed. That morning, it looked like calculation.
At the restaurant, Tony led me to the basement security room and played the footage from the VIP lounge after the wedding.
The screen showed Beatrice walking in, strong and steady, not with the fragile limp she sometimes used at church. Then Megan, my new daughter-in-law, entered in her wedding dress.
Beatrice poured champagne.
“To the stupidest man in Atlanta,” Megan said.
Beatrice laughed.
“To Elijah,” she replied. “The goose that lays the golden eggs.”
I gripped the chair.
Then they talked about selling the lakehouse I had gifted my son and using the money for Megan’s debts and a condo in Miami. They talked about my family trust, the one that would unlock millions when a biological grandchild was born.
Then Megan touched her stomach and laughed.
“Terrence thinks the baby is his. He doesn’t even know how to do the math.”
Beatrice warned her not to let me demand a DNA test.
My chest tightened.
Then Megan asked when I would “retire permanently.”
Beatrice took a sip of champagne.
“Soon,” she said. “I switched his heart medication three weeks ago. I’ve been crushing digoxin into his morning smoothies. One day he’ll fall asleep and not wake up. Then we own everything.”
The room lost its air.
For forty years, this woman had prayed over my meals, held my hand in hospitals, and smiled at me across breakfast tables.
And every morning, she had been poisoning me.
Then came the final blow.
Megan asked something about Terrence’s gullibility.
Beatrice smiled and said, “He gets that from his father.”
Megan frowned. “Elijah?”
“No,” Beatrice said. “Terrence is Silas’s son.”
Pastor Silas Jenkins.
My best friend.
The man who had officiated my wedding, baptized my son, and eaten Sunday dinner at my table for thirty years.
I nearly destroyed the monitor, but Tony grabbed my arm.
“If you destroy this, you destroy your only advantage,” he said. “This isn’t a family argument. It’s a conspiracy.”
He was right.
If I went home shouting, Beatrice would call me unstable. She would say the poison had damaged my mind. Without evidence, I would lose.
So I called my attorney, Ms. Sterling.
“Open a new file,” I told her. “Code name Omega. Freeze accounts, lock properties, suspend trust access, and get me a toxicologist. Test for digoxin.”
Then I went home.
Beatrice was waiting with a green smoothie.
“I made your favorite,” she said sweetly. “You missed it this morning.”
I took the glass.
I pretended to drink.
The liquid tasted bitter beneath the ginger. I spat it into a napkin when she looked away, then acted weak.
Thirty minutes later, I collapsed onto the living room rug.
Beatrice did not scream.
She did not call for help.
She nudged me with her shoe and whispered, “Wake up, old man.”
When I stayed still, she laughed.
Then she called Megan.