“We can’t give you copies of those signatures without a court order, but I can tell you she didn’t print that name,”
the teller whispered,
looking at my brother Dale’s neat block letters on my eighty-one-year-old mother’s bank card.
I sat in my Buick in the bank parking lot for ten minutes just staring at the steering wheel because my brain genuinely stopped working.
The air conditioning was blowing hot air,
but I didn’t even have the strength to turn the key.
My mother, Martha, is eighty-one.
She still lives in the little yellow ranch house in South Bend where she raised us.
She still clips coupons for fifty cents off dish soap and washes out her ziplock bags to dry them on the window sill.
But her eyesight has been failing,
so my brother Dale offered to handle her banking.
He was the good son.
He lived three miles away,
drove a nice Chevy,
and had a head for figures.
Last week, Mama asked me why her account was so low.
She had her green plastic check ledger open on the kitchen table.
She’s kept that ledger since my father died in 1994,
writing in her perfect,
backward-slanting cursive she learned at St. Jude’s parochial school.
Sister Beatrice used to tap Mama’s knuckles with a wooden ruler back in 1951 to make sure her slant was perfect. “A lazy slant is a lazy mind,” Mama still quotes. Her cursive was a work of art, slanting backwards, elegant, and instantly recognizable.
But the numbers on her statement didn’t match her ledger. Her Social Security check should have been eighteen hundred dollars. Only fourteen hundred was hitting her account.
I looked back through her records. Two full years. Every single month, on the first, four hundred dollars vanished into thin air.
I drove to the First National branch on Oak Street, expecting a computer glitch.
The teller, Sarah, had known my parents for twenty years. She pulled up the accounts on her heavy monitor.
There was a second account. Opened in Mama’s name across town.
Every month, an automatic transfer of four hundred dollars went straight into it. The signature on the card wasn’t Mama’s elegant, backward-slanting cursive. It was printed. In thick, neat block letters. Dale’s handwriting.
I asked for a copy. Sarah looked at me, looked at the card on her screen, and made that quiet statement that made my stomach drop.
I took the bank printouts, drove to Dale’s house, and parked behind his brand-new John Deere riding mower. Dale didn’t even have a large lawn. His yard was half an acre of flat suburban grass. He could have mowed it with a push mower in twenty minutes.
But he wanted the John Deere. He wanted to sit on it and wave to his neighbors.
I walked right past his new riding mower and knocked on the screen door. His wife, Brenda, answered holding a basket of clean laundry.
“Ruthie, what’s wrong?” she asked, looking at my face. “You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”
I didn’t say a word. I just laid the bank statements on their granite kitchen island. When she saw the automatic transfers and the printed signature card, her hand went to her mouth. She knew Dale’s handwriting as well as I did.
“He told me he got a performance bonus at State Farm,” Brenda whispered. Her face had completely lost its color. “He said that’s how we paid for the John Deere and his golf membership.”
Dale wasn’t poor. He worked as a claims adjuster. He made decent money. Brenda drove a brand-new GMC Yukon with leather seats. They went to Destin, Florida, every summer for two weeks.
Meanwhile, Mama was turning off her radiator in the winter and wearing two sweaters because she was worried about her heating bill.
We sat there in her kitchen, two women who had trusted the same man, while the laundry basket sat forgotten on the floor. Brenda didn’t defend him. She just looked sick to her stomach.
“Let’s go,” Brenda said, grabbing her purse.
We drove together to Mama’s house for Sunday dinner. Dale was already there, sitting on the porch with a box of cider donuts, looking like the perfect son. He was wearing ironed khakis and a blue button-down shirt.
I walked up the steps and dropped the papers right into his lap. Mama was standing in the doorway holding a teapot.
Dale looked at the papers, then at Brenda, then at me. His face went entirely empty.
“It’s an informal management fee, Ruth,” he whispered, trying to make his voice sound steady. “I’m the one who handles her roof leaks. I’m the one who drives her to the podiatrist.”
“You mow her lawn with a tractor she bought you,” Brenda said. Her voice was shaking.
Dale stood up, his mouth opening to argue, but Mama stepped onto the porch. She was holding her old green plastic check ledger in her hand.
She looked at Dale. She didn’t scream. She didn’t cry.
“I taught you how to write, Dale,” she said. Her voice was very quiet. “I remember holding your hand when you were six years old. You always hated cursive. You always printed your name.”
She sat down in her wicker porch chair. She adjusted her reading glasses.
“You will transfer nine thousand six hundred dollars back to my account by nine o’clock tomorrow morning,” Mama said. “Or your sister will take these papers to the sheriff. I already spoke to Father Thomas. He agrees.”
Dale stared at his own mother. He looked like a child caught stealing penny candy. He didn’t say a word. He just nodded, took his cider donuts, and walked to his car.
By nine o’clock the next morning, the money was back in Mama’s account. All of it.
I expected to feel a massive sense of victory. I thought I would feel lighter.
But I didn’t. When I went over to Mama’s house on Tuesday, she was sitting at the yellow Formica table. She was clipping a coupon for fifty cents off dish soap.
The green plastic ledger was sitting on the counter, closed.
“Do you want some tea, Ruthie?” she asked.
“Sure, Mama,” I said.
We drank our tea in silence. Dale hasn’t called her since. Brenda deleted all her Facebook photos of their trip to Florida.
I drove home and made my daughter pasta and didn’t tell her any of it. You win and then it’s just a Tuesday again.
