“You used my clinic credentials.”
“I borrowed them.”
“You sold private medical information.”
His face twitched. “You can’t prove that.”
I held up the phone.
He lunged.
I had been ready. Maybe I was seventy-one, maybe my knees complained every morning, but I had spent forty years dealing with angry men at a courthouse records desk. I knew the way a man’s shoulders changed before his hands did. I stepped back, and Lisa grabbed the heavy ceramic lamp from the nightstand.
“Do not touch my mother,” she said.
Darren stopped.
For several seconds, no one breathed.
Then sirens rose in the distance. Caleb must have called 911 from my car, exactly the way I had taught him. Smart boy. Brave boy.
Darren heard them too. His face changed one final time. No charm. No apology. Only calculation.
He looked toward the window.
Lisa saw it. “Don’t.”
But Darren was already moving.
PART 3
Darren did not leap from the window. That would have been too dramatic, too reckless, too unlike him.
He was not careless. That was what made him dangerous.
He moved toward the window first, drawing our eyes there, then suddenly pivoted and shoved past Lisa toward the door.
The lamp slipped from her hand and smashed across the floor.
“Darren!” she shouted.
I grabbed his sleeve, but he twisted free with enough force to throw me against the dresser. Pain shot through my hip. Lisa screamed my name, but I waved her off. We could not lose those phones. We could not lose the evidence. We could not allow him to reach Mia and Caleb.
Darren thundered down the stairs.
From outside, Caleb screamed, “Grandma!”
That sound put strength back into my legs.
Lisa and I ran after him. I was slower, but I knew the layout of that house. Darren reached the bottom of the stairs and headed straight for the front door. He yanked it open, then stopped.
Two police cruisers were pulling up to the curb.
For one brief moment, he looked almost offended, as though the law had interrupted his private life without making an appointment.
Then he turned and sprinted toward the kitchen.
Lisa chased him. I stayed near the front entrance, gripping the wall, trying to breathe through the pain in my side. One officer rushed toward me.
“Ma’am, are there children inside?”
“In my car,” I said. “Driveway. Two kids. The man is in the kitchen. His name is Darren Briggs. He may have phones with stolen medical information.”
The officer nodded and signaled to his partner.
From the kitchen came the noise of drawers opening and cabinets slamming. Darren was searching for something. Not a weapon, I hoped. A back door key, maybe. His car keys. Anything that could give him a way out.
Lisa’s voice cut through the noise. “It’s over!”
Darren shouted something I could not understand.
Then a chair fell.
The two officers moved fast, one through the hallway and the other around the outside toward the back entrance. I made my way to the living room window. My car sat in the driveway with its doors locked. Mia was in the front passenger seat, Caleb crouched low in the back. Mia held my old emergency phone in both hands, still connected to the dispatcher. Her eyes found mine through the glass.
I pressed my palm against the window.
She pressed hers against the car window.
That tiny gesture nearly broke me.
A minute later, Darren came out of the kitchen with one officer behind him and another blocking the back door. Something was clenched in his fist.
“Drop it,” the officer ordered.
Darren smiled then. Not his church smile. Not his husband smile. A thin, trapped smile.
“You don’t know what you’re doing,” he said. “My wife has mental health issues. Her mother hates me. The girl is unstable. This is a family misunderstanding.”
Lisa stepped into the hall behind him, pale but steady. “I am a registered nurse at Westbrook Women’s Health Clinic. My husband used my work credentials without permission. There is evidence upstairs. My daughter found it. My son called for help because he heard her screaming.”
Darren looked at her as if she had betrayed him simply by telling the truth.
The officer repeated, “Drop what’s in your hand.”
Darren opened his fist.
A tiny memory card fell to the floor.
The officer cuffed him before he could crush it beneath his shoe.
Then he fought, not like a mastermind, not like the powerful man he had pretended to be, but like an ordinary coward who had run out of rooms to control. He cursed Lisa. He cursed Mia. He called Caleb a liar. He called me a bitter old woman. Every word made him seem smaller.
Mia and Caleb were brought inside after Darren was secured in the cruiser. Mia would not look toward the front yard where he sat behind the glass. Caleb clung to Lisa with both arms wrapped around her waist.
“I’m sorry,” he kept saying. “I didn’t know what to do.”
“You did exactly right,” Lisa told him. “You called Grandma. You called 911. You protected your sister.”
Mia stood away from them, her arms wrapped tightly around herself. She looked older than fifteen and younger than fifteen at the same time.
I approached her slowly. “Sweetheart.”
She shook her head. “I didn’t scream because he hurt me.”
“I know.”
“He grabbed my wrist when I took the phone. He said if I told Mom, she’d go to prison because it was her login. He said no one would believe me because he was the adult.”
Lisa covered her mouth.
Mia’s voice broke. “I thought he was going to delete everything.”
I pulled her into my arms. She resisted for half a second, then collapsed against me.
The officers searched Darren’s room with Lisa’s permission. They found three prepaid phones, two flash drives, printed patient lists, and a notebook filled with usernames, passwords, and payment amounts. They also found copies of Lisa’s signature, practiced over and over on a yellow legal pad.
That was the part that made her sit down.
“He was going to frame me,” she whispered.
One of the officers, a woman named Sergeant Dana Whitaker, crouched in front of her. “Mrs. Briggs, based on what we see here, you need to contact your employer immediately and ask for legal counsel. You are not under arrest. But this is serious, and the clinic will need to protect its patients.”
Lisa nodded as though she understood the words, but I could tell she was still trapped inside the betrayal.