Rebecca started digging. Not illegally. Not theatrically. Just through normal channels: county records, civil filings, property transfers, UCC liens, public tax notices.

Within a week, she called me back. “They’re more exposed than they realize.”

My father hadn’t simply sold the family home and generously bought Melanie’s. He had used bridge debt and a private lender to close timing gaps, personally guaranteeing pieces under the assumption that future liquidity—very likely pressure on me—would fill the holes.

Melanie’s husband was also tied to a side obligation for renovation overruns that hadn’t been paid.

In plain English: the noble-sacrifice story was fiction. They had built an expensive illusion on unstable financing and then came for my house because they were running out of options.

That changed everything.

Rebecca sent one letter to both of them. It documented the assault, demanded no further contact except through counsel, and made one thing brutally clear: any attempt to pressure a transfer of my property, interfere with my son’s residence, or appear uninvited again would trigger a protective order request and civil action.

The letter also preserved claims related to the assault.

My mother responded first, through voicemail, sobbing that I was “destroying the family.”

My father responded with silence.

That worried me more. Because men like him, when their pride is wounded, either learn something or get reckless.

Mine got reckless.

A month later, a contractor friend told me my father had been saying he would “straighten out title nonsense” on my house soon enough because “family things are already in motion.”

That message went straight to Rebecca. She added it to the file and pushed harder.

Three months after the slap, the structure they built around Melanie’s house began to collapse.

The lender called someone they shouldn’t have.

And that’s when the trouble became public.

Part 3

The call came from my uncle David on a Thursday morning just after eight. He was my father’s younger brother and the only man in that family with a functioning conscience—though it usually arrived late and one disaster behind.

“Your parents are in big trouble,” he said.

I stood in my kitchen with my coffee halfway to my mouth and looked out the window at my son waiting for the bus.

“I know,” I replied.

He went quiet for a second, then exhaled. “So you’ve already heard about the fraud review?”