The next morning, Martha stood in the bank lobby, her knuckles white as she gripped her leather purse. The manager, a man half her age in a sharp suit, wouldn’t even look her in the eye. “It’s for your own protection, Mrs. Gable,” he repeated like a mantra.

“Protection from what? From buying groceries?” she demanded. He slid a folder across the desk containing the fine print of the update she had accepted. Buried on page forty-two was a clause that authorized the bank to act as a “temporary guardian.”
She realized then that her “suspicious activity” was a $500 withdrawal she’d made for her grandson’s graduation gift. To the bank’s new AI, it was a red flag. To Martha, it was a grandmother’s love, now characterized as a symptom of cognitive decline.
The manager explained that they had already notified Adult Protective Services. Martha felt the blood drain from her face. She wasn’t just losing her money; she was being sized up for a loss of her very freedom.
As she walked out, she noticed a group of other seniors huddled near the entrance. They all held the same confused, fearful expressions. One man was clutching a stack of unpaid medical bills, his eyes wet with tears.
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