My Daughter Left Me Out Of The Baptism: “There’s No Place For You, Dad.” I Went Back Home And…
The Ambush
I was at my kitchen table when my front door exploded inward. Wood splintered; the frame cracked. I grabbed my phone and hit record.
Colin came through first, wild-eyed. Behind him were three men: one in a white coat and two in scrubs.
“He’s having an episode!” Colin shouted. “Paranoid delusions! We need to sedate him!”
I backed up, phone recording.
“This is breaking and entering! Get out!”
The man in the white coat, Cross, used a fake professional voice.
“Mr. Wallace, please calm down. You’ve been acting erratically.” “This is kidnapping! I’m calling the police!” “Grab him,” Colin pointed, “before he hurts himself.”
The two in scrubs moved fast. They got my arms. I fought, kicked, and twisted, but they were strong.
“I’m being held against my will!” I shouted at the phone before it hit the floor, still recording. “This is kidnapping! I’m of sound mind!”
Cross pulled out a syringe.
“This will calm you down.”
I thrashed.
“Get off me!”
The needle moved toward my arm.
“Hurry up!” Colin was behind them.
Before it could hit, sirens. Everyone froze. Blue and red lights flashed through the broken door.
“Indianapolis Police! Exit with your hands up!”
They let go. I caught myself on the counter. Colin’s face went white.
“We should go,” Cross started.
Four officers burst in, guns drawn.
“On the ground! Hands behind your head!”
Colin tried to run. An officer tackled him.
“This is a misunderstanding!” Cross had his hands up. “I’m a licensed physician!” “Save it.”
Handcuffs clicked on all four of them.
“You have the right to remain silent.”
I was shaking, adrenaline hitting hard.
“I have video,” I managed.
An officer picked up my phone.
“We’ll need this as evidence.”
Paramedics checked me. Bruises, but nothing broken. The lead officer took my statement.
“What happened here?” “They broke into my home, tried to forcibly sedate me. Attempted kidnapping.”
Colin was handcuffed on the floor.
“He’s my father-in-law! He’s senile! We were helping!”
The officer looked at me.
“Sir, do you have proof you’re of sound mind?”
I pulled out Dr. Sutton’s certificate, dated this morning. He read it and nodded. A car pulled up. It was Jillian.
She saw the police cars and came running.
“Colin, what’s happening?”
She saw him handcuffed, being walked to a police car.
“Ma’am, step back.” An officer blocked her. “This man and three accomplices broke into this residence and attempted to forcibly sedate the homeowner.”
She looked at me.
“Dad, did you call the police?” “They broke into my house and tried to drug me. What did you think I’d do?”
Colin was being pushed into the police car.
“You set me up! This is entrapment!”
An officer closed the door, cutting him off. Jillian stood there looking at Colin in the car, then looking at me—torn.
“They want me at the station,” I said, “for a statement.”
Marvin pulled up. He’d called the police, he said, and had been watching from down the street.
“Let’s go.”
I got in his truck. As we backed out, I saw Jillian getting into her car with Liam in her arms. She was following us. For one moment, something cracked in my chest. My daughter, my grandson, following me because she had nowhere else to go.
Then I remembered: 200 guests, “no room for you, Dad.” The crack sealed over.
The Truth and the Ultimatum
The police station smelled like bad coffee and fluorescent lights. I spent two hours in an interview room with Detective Martinez and Lawrence. We went through everything. They watched the video. Martinez actually winced when Cross pulled out that syringe.
“Mr. Wallace, this is serious. Attempted kidnapping, assault, conspiracy. Your son-in-law is looking at five to seven years, minimum.” “I want to press full charges. All of them.”
He nodded and started typing. By 6:30, I was done. I walked out into the waiting area. Jillian was sitting there, feeding Liam a bottle. She looked exhausted. She had nowhere to go.
Down the hall, I could hear Colin shouting from one of the processing rooms. She saw me and stood up.
“Dad, can we talk? Please?”
I stopped, looked at her, then at Liam, and nodded.
“Five minutes.”
We moved to a quieter corner, still public but more private.
“I’m sorry,” her voice broke. “About the church, about everything. Colin said it would be better for networking. Colin said… Colin wanted…”
I cut her off.
“What did you want, Jillian?” “I wanted him to be happy. He was under so much pressure.” “What pressure?”
She hesitated, then it came out.
“He owes money to dangerous people. $87,000.”
I wasn’t surprised.
“Gambling?”
She nodded, ashamed.
“Online poker, sports betting. It started small. Then he thought if he could access your business, or if you were declared incompetent and he had power of attorney, he could pay them off. It was always about the money.” “So you decided to throw your father away to save him?” “I didn’t know he’d do this!” she was crying now. “I swear, I thought he just wanted to talk to you about… alone.” “You blocked me from my grandson’s baptism in front of 200 people. That wasn’t Colin. That was you.”
Silence. I pulled out an envelope Lawrence had prepared.
“This is my updated will.”
She read it, and her face went pale.
“A trust fund for Liam. But what about me?” “You’re in it as trustee when Liam turns 25. But the money is his, not yours.” “Dad, I’m your daughter.” “You are my daughter. That’s why I’m giving you one chance. One.”
I laid it out. The house in Broad Ripple: 30 days, then 2,800 a month rent or she’s out. Credit cards: canceled permanently. No more money from me.
“But a job offer. Wallace Auto Repair. $15 an hour. Start Wednesday, 5:45 a.m. Whatever Curtis tells her to do. Sweeping floors, emptying trash.”
She looked horrified.
“I can’t do manual labor. I have a baby!” “Then figure something else out. Your husband’s going to prison. Your society friends stopped answering your calls. You’ve got no money, no job, no skills. So you can take my offer, or you can leave. Your choice.” “And if I don’t show up Wednesday?” “Then you and Liam are completely on your own. No house, no money, nothing.”
I stood up and started walking toward Marvin.
“Where am I supposed to go tonight?” her voice was desperate. “That’s not my problem anymore. You made your bed.”
I walked out of that station with Marvin and didn’t look back.
“Think she’ll show?” he asked as we got in his truck. I shrugged. “Honestly, I don’t know. But I gave her a chance. That’s more than she gave me.”
