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PART 3: HE THOUGHT HE HAD MARRIED A HELPLESS HEIRESS… UNTIL HIS MOTHER’S PHONE CALL EXPOSED THEIR ENTIRE SCAM

PART 3: HE THOUGHT HE HAD MARRIED A HELPLESS HEIRESS… UNTIL HIS MOTHER’S PHONE CALL EXPOSED THEIR ENTIRE SCAM

The next morning, the tropical sun baked the tarmac of the Honolulu airport, but I felt nothing but a freezing, clinical detachment.

I poured Derek a cup of expensive Kona coffee in the first-class lounge, keeping my eyes lowered, my shoulders slightly hunched. I was playing the role of the traumatized, broken woman he so desperately needed me to be.

“I’m sorry about last night,” I whispered, staring into my black coffee, feeding his massive, fragile delusion. “I was just… stressed from the travel. And missing my dad. I overreacted to the belt. We can look at the paperwork for the holding company today when we get back.”

Derek puffed out his chest, his bruised ego instantly healing, inflating with toxic hubris. He took the coffee, giving me a magnanimous, patronizing smile.

“It’s fine, Maya. I forgive you,” he said smoothly, the lie rolling off his tongue with sickening ease. “Marriage is an adjustment. My mother is coming over to the estate at noon with the notary. It’s for our future. I just want to take the burden of the business off your shoulders.”

We landed in Los Angeles three hours later. We took a private car back to my father’s sprawling estate in the Hollywood Hills—a house Derek already acted like he owned.

The absolute moment Derek dragged his luggage upstairs and stepped into the marble shower, I was out the back door.

I slipped through the manicured hedges and slid into the back seat of an unmarked, heavily tinted black Lincoln Navigator waiting idling in the alleyway.

Sitting in the back was Marcus Vance, my father’s fiercely protective, notoriously cutthroat estate litigator. Marcus was a man who wore five-thousand-dollar suits and viewed the law not as a shield, but as a scalpel to dissect his enemies.

I slid the encrypted flash drive across the leather seat.

“They are trying to extort the commercial properties,” I said, my voice stripped of any grief, replaced by a forensic chill. “Evelyn is bringing a notary to the house at noon. I need to know exactly why they are doing this. I need their leverage.”

Marcus didn’t offer empty condolences. He opened his laptop, plugging in the drive, instantly tapping into deep-background federal financial databases, offshore registries, and dark-web credit networks. His fingers flew across the keyboard.

For ten minutes, the only sound in the SUV was the hum of the air conditioning and the rapid clicking of keys. Then, Marcus stopped. A terrifying, predatory smile spread across his face.

“They are parasites, Maya,” Marcus said quietly, turning the screen toward me. “They put on a good show at the country club, but they are drowning. Derek’s so-called ’boutique investment firm’ is a hollow shell company. He is three million dollars in debt to a syndicate of unregulated offshore creditors in Macau. Very dangerous people.”

Marcus tapped another window. “And Evelyn… her aristocratic facade is crumbling. Her estate in Bel-Air has three liens against it. She is exactly ninety days away from a public bank auction and total foreclosure. They are penniless frauds.”

I stared at the red numbers on the screen. The betrayal settled deep into my marrow. “They targeted me at my father’s funeral,” I whispered, the final puzzle piece locking into place. “This wasn’t a whirlwind romance. It was a targeted, hostile acquisition to liquidate my inheritance and save their miserable lives.”

“Exactly,” Marcus confirmed, his eyes hardening. “They want you to sign over the fifteen-million-dollar commercial real estate portfolio to a joint holding company they control. Once the ink dries, they will leverage the properties, pay off the offshore syndicate, save Evelyn’s house, and leave you financially gutted.”

My blood ran entirely cold, but my hands remained perfectly steady. The wolverine was out of the cage.

“Draft the transfer papers, Marcus,” I commanded, my voice vibrating with absolute authority. “Make them look identical to the ones Evelyn is bringing. Replicate the legal jargon perfectly. But I want you to encode them with a tracing watermark. And I need a wire.”

Marcus raised an eyebrow, a spark of genuine respect in his eyes. “You’re going to sign them?”

“I want them to commit federal wire fraud, conspiracy, and extortion on high-definition video,” I said, pulling a sleek, expensive-looking fountain pen from my purse. I clicked the top, activating the micro-lens camera hidden in the clip. “I don’t just want to divorce him, Marcus. I want to annihilate them.”

Marcus smiled, snapping his laptop shut. “I’ll have the FBI white-collar crimes task force on standby at the perimeter. Let them take the bait.”

I slipped out of the SUV and back into my house just as the water shut off upstairs. I quickly brewed a pot of chamomile tea, setting out expensive porcelain cups. I sat demurely at the massive mahogany dining room table just as the doorbell rang.

Derek hurried downstairs, kissing my cheek with a Judas smile, and opened the door.

Evelyn walked in, radiating a venomous, fake warmth. She was followed by a sleazy, sweating man clutching a notary stamp. Evelyn smiled her predatory smile, holding a thick manila folder to her chest, completely unaware that the ink pen resting on the table beside my teacup was currently broadcasting her impending federal felony in real-time.

to be continued…

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