After I Sold My Secret Gold, My Mother Called the Cops
The sudden, sharp knock of the police on my apartment door jolted me from my trance. I was staring at a gold bar, its weight heavy in my palm.
Just hours earlier, I had been laid off. Then, my doctor called with the results of my scan: gallstones, requiring immediate surgery. The five-thousand-dollar price tag was a death sentence for my already decimated savings.
This hundred-gram gold bar, purchased ten years ago with my very first paycheck and my mother's contribution, was now my lifeline.
When Id called my mom, her voice had been thick with guilt. She kept sighing, blaming herself. She was convinced my recent hospital visits to care for her were the reason Id been fired.
Just sell your share of the gold, honey. Its the only way I can help now, shed choked out, her voice breaking.
I was planning to visit a jeweler first thing in the morning. I never expected this kind of late-night visit.
Weve received a report that youve stolen a gold bar. Please cooperate with our investigation. The officers words were like shards of ice piercing my heart.
When I opened the door, the officer stood there, his face grim, his eyes sizing me up with a mixture of suspicion and contempt.
I was in my pajamas, my makeup-free face sallow and drawn from the constant pain. The loose-fitting sleep shirt, which had been snug on me just three years ago, now hung off my frame like a sheet.
A minute ago, I had been doubled over from a searing gallstone attack, so intense I couldn't move. I lay curled in a fetal position, my back soaked in a cold sweat, wondering if this was how I was going to die.
Now, because of a false accusation, I was forcing my ravaged body to stand, to somehow find the breath to speak to a cop.
I clutched my stomach with one hand, bracing myself against the doorframe with the other. My fingers were so thin they were practically skeletal, like the brittle, dead branches of a winter tree. It felt like they could snap with the slightest pressure.
The officers eyes raked over me, his voice dripping with disdain. "What is your relationship to a Ms. Susan Carter?"
I fought through a wave of agony, my voice weak. "She's my mother."
He let out a short, sharp huff. "She's reporting that you stole a one-hundred-gram gold bar from her. Hand over the stolen property and come with us to the station. Cooperate, and maybe you'll get a lighter sentence."
The commotion had drawn my neighbors out of their apartments. They poked their heads out, hungry for gossip.
One of them, Mr. Henderson from 9A, immediately started typing, his phones screen glowing in the dim hallway. The notification from the buildings group chat buzzed in my pocket.
Henderson (9A): BREAKING NEWS, EVERYONE. The girl in 9C just got busted for stealing from her own mom. Cops are at her door RIGHT NOW.
Henderson (9A): I always knew there was something off about her. Always coming and going by herself with that sour look on her face, like the whole world owed her something.
Harris (8C): I live right below her. I hear these weird thuds late at night all the time. No wonder she's got no class, she's a damn thief.
Jenna (6A): lol busted. A thief in our building. And she ripped off her own mother? What a degenerate. Should've gotten a dog instead.
Building Mgmt: Please check your apartments and report any missing items immediately. Lets handle this all at once.
I glanced down at my phone, the screen alive with accusations. My mind was a chaotic storm, but I calmly retrieved the gold bar and handed it to the officer.
"There must be some misunderstanding," I whispered, my voice hoarse. "My mom and I bought this together years ago. I'm sick, I need the money for surgery. We talked about it, and she agreed I could sell it."
Mr. Henderson, still loitering in his doorway, laughed out loud. "Playing the victim, are we? You looked perfectly fine coming and going the other day. Be careful what you wish for, faking an illness like that. You'll end up six feet under for real, you pathetic little ghost."
His venom, on top of days of unrelenting pain, finally made me snap. I was gasping for air, my face flushed with a furious heat.
"You have no proof," I shot back, my voice trembling with rage. "You smear my name in the group chat, and now you're insulting me to my face? Did your parents not teach you a single shred of decency?"
Seeing the fury in my eyes, the officer tensed, stepping between us as if I were about to lunge at the man.
Henderson saw his chance and doubled down, his smirk widening. "Oh, did I touch a nerve, ghost girl? If you didn't steal it, the cops wouldn't be here. Instead of wasting your breath yelling at me, you should be picking out a coffin. You'll probably drop dead in the street one of these days anyway."
I'd always been polite in the building, friendly to my neighbors. Hendersons own daughter used to come to my apartment to watch cartoons and eat the fruit Id buy for her. I couldn't fathom where this deep-seated hatred came from.
My blood was boiling. I took a shaky step forward, intending only to confront him, to demand an explanation.
But the officer misinterpreted my movement. In one swift, brutal motion, he grabbed my arm, twisted it behind my back, and slammed me to the floor. I was pinned, helpless, like an animal.
The explosion of pain from the impact and my inflamed gallbladder made me cry out. During the struggle, my pajama top rode up, exposing the jaundiced, yellow skin of my torso. My ribs were starkly visible beneath the thin layer of flesh.
The onlooking neighbors gasped. "Oh, god," one of them whispered. "Maybe she really is sick."
The second officer, who had been standing back, flinched for a second before quickly snapping handcuffs onto my raw wrists.
Hendersons face lit up with manic excitement. He raised his phone, capturing my complete and utter humiliation. "Look, everyone! They're cuffing the bitch! Payback's a bitch, ain't it?"
I was shoved into the back of the squad car, and another gallstone attack ripped through me. I curled into a tight ball, sucking in desperate, ragged breaths, trying to find a rhythm that would override the pain.
The officer sitting next to me hesitated, then asked, his voice laced with suspicion, "Are you on something? Is that why you needed the money, for your next fix?"
"Your symptoms... they look a lot like withdrawal."
I was shaking so hard my teeth chattered. "No," I managed to get out between gasps. "I'm sick... gallbladder... need the money to... live."
The older officer driving the car let out a cynical laugh. "Heard that one a million times. If you needed it to live, you think your own mother would call the cops on you? A real mother would be scraping together every last penny to save her kid."
The pain was making my vision swim. "Yeah," I murmured, more to myself than to them. "A real mother... should be just like that."
The older cop seemed puzzled by my detached response, but he quickly dismissed it as drug-induced rambling. "We see your type all the time," he sneered. "So selfish you'd even steal your parents' retirement savings. You talk about being sick? I saw your mother. She had a fresh bandage from an IV on her hand. Now that's what being sick looks like."
The agony in my abdomen was so intense I couldn't speak. The world began to blur. Just before I passed out, it felt like my soul briefly detached from my body, pulling me back through time.
I was back in my final year of college. My roommates and I had stumbled upon a psychic's livestream. We chipped in to get our birth charts read.
The other girls all had promising futures: natural wealth, good karma, blessings from ancestors.
But when he got to my chart, the psychic's brow furrowed.
He said I was destined for shallow relationships, a short life of poverty and hardship, and that I would bring misfortune to my family.
Then he paused, peering closer at the screen. His expression softened. "Wait," he said, "this is a Phoenix Chart. Your true destiny is locked. It can only be forged in the fire of familial betrayal. Your fate will not reverse unless you are pushed to the absolute brink of despair."
My roommates, trying to spare my feelings, immediately declared the guy a fraud.
I didn't care about being poor or having bad luck. My life already felt worthless. But his words about "shallow relationships" felt like a hot coal pressed against my heart.
All I had ever wanted was my parents' love.
I craved the affection they poured so effortlessly onto my younger brother, Kevin. The warm encouragement, the proud glancesthey were never for me. I was a ghost in my own home, hiding in the shadows, stealing snippets of their praise for him and pretending it was for me.
For twenty years, I had the same recurring dream. In it, my parents were mine alone. I wore my brother's face like a mask, greedily soaking up a love that was never meant for me.
"That which you can't have," the psychic's voice echoed in my memory, "will become the cage that imprisons you for life."
To get my parents attention, I first tried faking illnesses. But they were indifferent. The more I complained of pain, the more they saw me as a fragile, useless burden. A money pit.
So I switched tactics. I became an overachiever. I got straight A's, won academic awards, became class president. This earned me a few fleeting glances, but they still believed Kevin was the truly brilliant one.
Boys are late bloomers, my father would say. He doesnt even have to try. Hes naturally smarter. Youll see.
Eventually, I learned to grovel. I became the perfect, helpful daughter. I did all the housework, served them tea, even washed my brothers underwear.
Finally, they started to praise me.
Alice is so thoughtful now, a real comfort to us. She knows how to sacrifice for the family. Such a good girl, especially for helping her brother out. A wonderful big sister.
This is great. We didn't raise you for nothing. If you could just tidy up Kevins room, youd be perfect.
Their words were like a drug. I became a willing slave, an expert people-pleaser, not just for my parents, but for my brother, too.
After I started working, I spent my first paycheck on a bracelet for my mom and my first bonus on new shoes for my dad. I used my commission to buy Kevin a new gaming laptop. For myself, I spent five dollars on a bowl of beef noodle soup from a little shop Id always dreamed of trying as a kid.
Kevin saw me eating it and wrinkled his nose in disgust.
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