To them, Sarah was still the failed daughter in dark clothes, with serious eyes and a life they had never bothered to understand.
In the distance, sirens began to approach.
Mrs. Helen grabbed her again.
“Listen to me carefully. You are going to say you were driving. You panicked. You got scared. You came back home because you didn’t know what else to do.”
“I was upstairs putting away my books.”
Ashley rolled her eyes.
“Your little law books. How sweet.”
Sarah stared straight at her.
“Ashley, answer me once. Did you cause that accident and leave the scene?”
For a second, the whole street went silent.
Then Ashley leaned closer.
She smelled like expensive wine.
“Yes, I did,” she whispered with venom. “And who is going to believe you? You look like a cr!minal.”
Mrs. Helen smiled as if that sentence had solved everything.
Richard let out a relieved breath.
And in that instant, Sarah understood there was nothing left to protect.
She reached into her pocket, took out her phone, and unlocked the recording.
“Perfect,” she said.
Ashley frowned.
“Perfect what?”
Sarah looked up just as the police cruiser turned the corner.
“That you finally said it out loud.”
Then she made one call that left her entire family frozen.
The first patrol car pulled in behind the damaged vehicle.
Then another arrived.
Mrs. Helen changed faces in seconds.
She pressed one hand to her chest, forced tears into her eyes, and rushed toward the officers like a desperate mother.
“Officers, thank God! My daughter Sarah came home hysterical. She said she h!t someone with her car. We don’t know what to do with her.”
Ashley covered her face with both hands, playing the victim.
Richard wrapped an arm around her shoulders.
Sarah stayed still.
She had seen better lies in criminal court.
But very few had been this shameless.
One officer stepped toward her.
“Ma’am, were you driving this vehicle?”
Mrs. Helen answered for her.
“Yes. She was. She’s always been unstable. Lives alone, keeps strange company, works around courtrooms…”
Sarah raised one hand.
“Officer, I’ll give my statement. But first, I need you to listen to this.”
Ashley lowered her hands.
“You had no right to record us.”
“In my car, I did,” Sarah said. “And on my property.”
Richard blinked.
“What do you mean, your car?”
Sarah kept her eyes on Ashley.
“My vehicle has a judicial security system. Exterior cameras, cabin audio, GPS, cloud backup, and automatic crash activation.”
Ashley’s face lost its color.
“You’re lying.”
“I’m not.”
Sarah tapped the screen.
First came the footage of Ashley getting into the car with keys she had taken from Sarah’s purse.
Then a wine bottle rolled across the passenger-side floor.
Mrs. Helen lunged for the phone.
“Give me that!”
An officer stepped between them.
“Ma’am, step back.”