My Daughter Drugged My Wine After I Sold The Family Orchards-lequyen994 - Chainityai

My Daughter Drugged My Wine After I Sold The Family Orchards-lequyen994

The first thing I remember after the doctor said “heavy sedative” was not fear. It was the sound of Aaron’s shoes pacing the hospital hallway. Back and forth. Back and forth. Too clean, too steady, too impatient for a husband whose wife had just collapsed beside a dinner table.

Justine was behind a curtain with monitors clipped to her. My only child. My Lorna’s girl. The child who used to ride beside me on the old tractor and sing loud enough to scare blackbirds out of the apple rows. She was alive, thank God, but she was not innocent. I knew that before any lawyer said it. I had watched her hand. I had watched the glass. I had watched her body take the drug meant for mine.

Aaron saw me looking and softened his voice like syrup. “Stan, you should let me take you home. This has been too much for you.”

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That was the first time, after the wine, that I understood the shape of the trap. Not the whole trap, not yet, but enough. He did not need me dead. Dead men have estates, lawyers, trustees, court filings, and probate. A confused old man, though, sitting under fluorescent hospital lights after a rich man’s dinner, could be handled. A confused old man could be guided. A confused old man could sign where he was told.

So I acted confused. I let my hands shake. I asked the same question twice. I stared at the vending machine as if I had forgotten why I was there. Aaron watched me do it, and relief moved through his face so quickly that another person might have missed it. I did not miss it.

When he stepped into the side corridor, I leaned back and closed my eyes. Through the cracked door, I heard him say, “It’s still on. Reschedule.”

The old Stanley, the one Lorna used to tease for trusting too much when family was involved, might have gone home with him. That Stanley was gone. The man in that chair had swallowed grief for three years and nearly swallowed poison that night. I called Mania Rakihana first, because the girl had risked her job to tell the truth. She answered on the first ring, crying so hard she could barely speak, and said she would swear to anything she saw.

Then I called Selwyn Brock.

Selwyn was the only attorney I had ever met who could make silence feel like a weapon. He was half retired, supposedly fishing more than practicing, but when I said the words “brown vial” and “conservatorship,” I heard a chair scrape on his end of the line.

“Do not go home,” he said. “Do not drink anything. Do not be alone with either of them. I am on the first flight.”

By dawn, we were in a borrowed conference room above a law office in Yakima. Selwyn arrived in a wrinkled coat with a briefcase older than my first pickup. Mania came in behind him, pale and exhausted, still in her black server shoes. She apologized to me, which nearly broke me. She was twenty-three and had more courage at that table than my own blood.

Selwyn’s investigator began laying out the pieces.

The appointment with Dr. Elden Pasque had been booked in my name three weeks earlier. I had never heard of him. He was a private geriatric psychiatrist with a polished website, a wall full of degrees, and a debt of almost four hundred thousand dollars tied to one of Aaron’s property deals. The petition for emergency conservatorship had already been drafted. The language said I had shown signs of “acute cognitive instability,” “financial vulnerability,” and “impaired judgment after recent bereavement.”

Recent bereavement. That was what they called Lorna. Not my wife. Not the woman who stood in rain beside me while we planted the south block. Not the mother who spent twenty-eight hours bringing Justine into the world. Just a useful word in a legal paragraph.

Then Selwyn turned the last page around. Justine’s signature was already there as a witness. Dated eleven days before the dinner.

There are pains that arrive like a knife, sharp and clean. This was not one of them. This pain was wet concrete. It filled the chest slowly, heavy enough that breathing became a job. I said, “She planned it.”

Selwyn did not answer. He only nodded once, as if the truth deserved no decoration.

The restaurant footage arrived at 7:42 in the morning. The camera above table fourteen had caught the whole thing with the cruel clarity expensive places buy for insurance. Aaron held his phone close to my face. Justine opened her clutch. The brown vial came out under the table edge. Her wrist turned. The powder went into my wine. Then, after Mania warned me and I made my clumsy little spill, the tablecloth shifted. The glasses changed places.

Mania watched that part with her hands over her mouth. I watched Justine. Even on camera, even in silence, her hand did not shake.

By nine, we were in court because Aaron and Justine had already filed the emergency papers. Their attorney, a nervous young man who had clearly been told only half the story, stood and described me as a widower in steep decline. He said I was at risk of being exploited. He said my daughter and son-in-law were only trying to preserve my life’s work.

Selwyn rose slowly. He did not raise his voice. Men like Aaron expect shouting because shouting gives them something to perform against. Selwyn gave him paper.

First came Mania’s affidavit. Then the hospital toxicology report. Then the still frame of Justine’s hand over my glass. Then the pharmacy purchase, made on a company card linked to Aaron. Then the debt tying Aaron to Dr. Pasque. Last came the pre-drafted conservatorship packet with my daughter’s signature already waiting.

The judge took off her glasses. She looked at Aaron for so long that the room seemed to lose air.

“Counsel,” she said, “your client should stop talking.”

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