At 12:17, my phone rang again.
Lauren.
I answered out of curiosity. Her voice was tight.
“This is insane.”
I touched my bruised lip as Rachel quietly set water beside me.
“No,” I said. “What was insane was watching your husband beat a sixty-eight-year-old man while you sat there smiling.”
She ignored it.
“You can’t leave us like this. The staff is overwhelmed. We have guests this weekend.”
Guests.
No apology. No concern.
“You should cancel brunch,” I said. “Try honesty for once.”
She softened her tone, shifting strategy.
“Daniel is under pressure. Last night went too far, yes, but selling the house over a family argument is cruel.”
I closed my eyes briefly.
“Not the argument,” I said. “The people you’ve both become.”
I ended the call.
Later at the clinic, my injuries were documented—face, ribs, hands. The report went straight to my lawyer.
Because the house was only part of it.
The deeper truth came out quickly. Daniel hadn’t just lived in the house—he had used it. Listed it as his asset. Leveraged it for loans, credibility, status.
I sat with a forensic accountant, Laura Mitchell, as she explained.
He hadn’t just enjoyed the illusion.
He had monetized it.
There was more—fake reimbursements, inflated invoices, money routed through shell vendors tied to Lauren’s family.
I recognized the pattern immediately.
Fraud.
By afternoon, consequences began. Credit lines froze. Investors started asking questions. His office was notified.
That was why he panicked.
Not because he loved the house.
Because it was a mask.
And without it, he was exposed.
That evening, reports came in. Daniel had shown up furious, tearing papers, punching walls. Staff shaken. One quit on the spot.
“Unstable,” someone said.
That word stayed with me.
Because the house had been unstable for a long time.
That night, in my smaller apartment, I finally unwrapped the watch.
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