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The first words Travis said to me that night weren't hello or I love you. They were sharp, venomous, and delivered through clenched teeth in the marble entryway of the most intimidating house I'd ever seen. Twenty-three minutes, Elena. Twenty-three minutes late to meet my mother. Do you have any idea what you've just done? His face was pale, his hands trembling as he gripped my shoulders, and in that moment, I realized that the evening I'd spent weeks preparing for had already fallen apart before it truly began. But what he didn't know, what neither of us could have known, was that those twenty-three minutes would become the most important decision of my entire life. Before we jump back in, tell us where you're tuning in from, and if this story touches you, make sure you're subscribed, because tomorrow, I've saved something extra special for you! This is the story of how I walked into a trap designed to break me and walked out having discovered a truth I'd been searching for without even knowing it. Three weeks earlier, my phone buzzed during my lunch break at the Second Chances Foundation, the small nonprofit tucked between a laundromat and a pawn shop on the east side of Seattle. I was eating a turkey sandwich at my desk, reviewing intake forms for a veteran named Marcus who'd been living in his car for eight months, when the email appeared. The subject line was formal, almost sterile in its precision. Evening reception at the Walsh residence. Your attendance is requested. I stared at the screen, a knot forming instantly in my stomach. The sender was someone named Diane Harrison, listed as executive assistant to Catherine Walsh. I didn't need to google the name. Everyone in Seattle knew who Catherine Walsh was. Real estate mogul, philanthropist in name though rarely in action, and a woman whose reputation preceded her like winter wind, cold, cutting, impossible to ignore. Travis had mentioned his mother exactly twice in the six months we'd been dating. The first time was casual, dismissive even. She's busy, he'd said. Travels a lot. Doesn't really do the whole meet the girlfriend thing. The second time was three weeks ago, after I'd pressed him on why we never talked about his family. His face had gone tight, guarded, and he'd said something I'd never forget. My mother doesn't meet people, Elena. She evaluates them. And once she's made up her mind about you, there's no changing it. I'd laughed it off then, assuming he was exaggerating the way people do when they're embarrassed by overbearing parents.