A Silent Billionaire’s Therapy Tablet Exposed the Nephew Who Controlled His Mansion-xurixuri

Victor’s whiskey soaked into the white cuff of his shirt, but he did not look at it.

His eyes stayed on the tablet in Nurse Elaine’s hands.

The room had gone so quiet that I could hear the oxygen tube whisper against Eduardo Salvatierra’s cheek. Rain tapped the glass behind him. Lupita’s bare toes curled against the metal footrest, and her little stuffed rabbit lay on the floor with one ear flattened under the wheelchair wheel.

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CALL. ATTORNEY.

The robotic voice had come from Eduardo’s desk speaker, flat and mechanical, but those two words landed harder than shouting.

Victor recovered first.

He set his glass down with careful fingers, wiped his cuff once with a linen napkin, and smiled at Nurse Elaine as if she had made an embarrassing mistake at dinner.

“Mr. Salvatierra has involuntary movements when he’s agitated,” he said. “You know that.”

Nurse Elaine did not move from the doorway.

She was in her late fifties, with gray hair pinned too tightly and reading glasses hanging from a chain around her neck. Her face looked drained, but her hand on the therapy tablet stayed steady.

“That was not involuntary,” she said.

Victor’s jaw shifted.

I felt Lupita press closer to my skirt.

Eduardo’s fingers were still wrapped around her small hand. Not squeezing hard enough to hurt her. Just enough to keep contact, like a man gripping the edge of a dock after years in dark water.

Victor took one step toward the tablet.

Elaine lifted it higher.

“The medication log,” she said, “shows no entries for March 3rd, March 9th, March 14th, or March 17th.”

“That is an administrative issue.”

“His blood pressure crashed those same four nights.”

The smell of whiskey mixed with lemon polish and rain. My throat tightened around the air.

Victor turned his polite smile toward me.

“Maria, take your daughter to the kitchen. Now.”

His voice was soft. Almost kind.

That made it worse.

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