PART 3
The stranger didn’t even glance at her.
“My name is Daniel Reeves.”
His eyes never left Ethan’s.
“I believe your wife invited us.”
The room fell silent.
Margaret looked from Daniel to me.
Then back again.
“What nonsense is this?”
I calmly folded my hands in front of me.
“No nonsense.”
“I thought breakfast might be more interesting with a few additional guests.”
Ethan finally found his voice.
“You had no right to bring people into my house.”
“Our house,” I corrected softly.
His jaw tightened.
Daniel took one slow step forward.
“I’d appreciate it if everyone remained seated.”
The deputy sheriff quietly closed the kitchen door behind him.
The click of the latch sounded strangely final.
Margaret suddenly became uncomfortable.
She forced a laugh.
“There has obviously been some misunderstanding.”
Daniel finally looked at her.
“There have actually been dozens of misunderstandings.”
He opened the leather folder the woman handed him.
“Most of them involving millions of dollars.”
Ethan slammed both hands against the dining table.
“This meeting is over.”
“No,” I said quietly.
“It has only just begun.”
His eyes shot toward me.
For years I had avoided meeting his stare.
Not today.
Today I looked directly into his eyes.
There was something there he had never seen before.
He recognized it immediately.
He wasn’t looking at his wife anymore.
He was looking at an opponent.
“You’ve lost your mind,” he hissed.
“Have I?”
I walked toward the china cabinet and removed a small wooden box.
The same box Ethan believed held my grandmother’s jewelry.
Instead, I opened it and carefully placed eight flash drives onto the table.
One by one.
Click.
Click.
Click.
The tiny sounds echoed through the silent kitchen.
Ethan stared at them.
His breathing changed.
“What are those?”
“My insurance policy.”
Margaret frowned.
“Ethan?”
He didn’t answer.
I picked up the first drive.
“This one contains recordings from your office.”
The second.
“This one contains copies of deleted financial transfers.”
The third.
“This one contains emails your assistant believed she erased.”
The fourth.
“Phone calls.”
The fifth.
“Bank statements.”
The sixth.
“Property records.”
The seventh.
“The offshore accounts.”
Then I rested my hand on the final flash drive.
“And this one…”
I smiled.
“…contains the conversation you had yesterday at 11:42 p.m.”
Every muscle in Ethan’s body froze.
He knew exactly which conversation I meant.
Because it wasn’t with me.
Margaret looked between us.
“What conversation?”
Ethan answered too quickly.
“Nothing.”
I looked at Daniel.
He nodded once.
The woman beside him removed a portable speaker from her folder.
She connected the flash drive.
Within seconds…
Ethan’s own voice filled the kitchen.
“…once the company signs the merger, I’ll move everything overseas.”
A second voice laughed.
A woman’s voice.
Young.
Confident.
“So what about your wife?”
Ethan chuckled.
“Claire?”
There was a pause.
Then came the sentence that drained every trace of color from Margaret’s face.
“She’ll sign whatever I put in front of her.”
Another laugh.
“And if she refuses?”
“I’ll make sure she has no choice.”
The recording continued.
“I’ve already started documenting her as emotionally unstable.”
“I have photographs.”
“I’ve spoken with two doctors willing to help.”
“When everything’s finished, she’ll end up in a psychiatric facility.”
“I’ll inherit everything.”
Silence.
No one moved.
Margaret slowly turned toward her son.
“Ethan…”
He couldn’t speak.
She stared at him as though seeing a stranger.
“You said she was depressed.”
“You told me she needed treatment.”
“You told me she imagined things.”
He swallowed.
“Mother…”
“You lied to me?”
“I can explain.”
Daniel quietly closed the folder.
“I don’t believe you can.”
The deputy stepped forward.
“Ethan Blackwood.”
His voice was calm.
“You are not under arrest at this moment.”
“But you are officially being served notice that a criminal financial investigation has begun.”
He handed Ethan a thick envelope.
Ethan didn’t take it.
It slipped from the deputy’s fingers onto the polished hardwood floor.
Margaret looked as though she might faint.
She reached for her coffee.
Her hands shook so violently that the cup tipped over.
Dark coffee spread across the white tablecloth like spilled ink.
She whispered only one sentence.
“What have you done?”
Ethan’s composure cracked for the first time in our entire marriage.
He rounded the table toward me.
“You did this.”
His voice had become low.
Dangerously low.
“I trusted you.”
I almost laughed.
“You trusted me?”
“You hit me less than twenty-four hours ago.”
“You cheated on me.”
“You stole from investors.”
“You forged signatures.”
“You planned to lock me away.”
Then I gently touched my bruised lip.
“And somehow I’m the one who betrayed your trust?”
His fists clenched.
The deputy immediately stepped between us.
“I’d advise against taking another step.”
For several long seconds, nobody breathed.
Finally Ethan backed away.
Only one step.
But it was enough.
The first retreat I had ever seen from him.
Daniel glanced at me.
“There is one more thing.”
I nodded.
“Go ahead.”
He removed a large manila envelope from the folder.
“I believe everyone should see this.”
Margaret accepted it with trembling fingers.
Inside were dozens of glossy photographs.
She flipped through the first few.
Then another.
Then another.
Her face drained of every remaining drop of color.
“No…”
she whispered.
“This can’t be real.”
She turned one photograph toward Ethan.
It showed him entering a luxury condominium just after midnight.
Wrapped around his arm…
…was not merely another woman.
It was someone Margaret knew.
Someone whose betrayal would destroy not only Ethan’s marriage—
but the entire Blackwood family.
Margaret’s hands began to shake so violently that the photographs scattered across the dining room floor.
And when I saw whose face stared back from those pictures…
I realized breakfast was about to become the least painful part of Ethan Blackwood’s day.
PART 4
The photographs slid across the polished hardwood floor like oversized playing cards.
No one rushed to pick them up.
No one wanted to.
Margaret stared at the image lying closest to her feet.
Her lips parted.
Then closed again.
She looked as though the air had been stolen from her lungs.
Ethan didn’t move.
He already knew who was in those pictures.
He simply prayed no one else would recognize her.
But they did.
Especially Margaret.
Because the woman wrapped around Ethan’s arm wasn’t a stranger.
She wasn’t a secretary.
She wasn’t some woman he’d met in a hotel bar.
She was Margaret’s own goddaughter.
Olivia Harrington.
The daughter of Margaret’s lifelong best friend.
The little girl Margaret had practically helped raise.
The woman she proudly introduced as “the daughter I never had.”
Margaret bent down with trembling hands and picked up another photograph.
Then another.
Each one was dated.
Each one stamped with the location.
Luxury restaurants.
Private airports.
Weekend resorts.
A beach house in Charleston.
The oldest photo had been taken nearly eighteen months earlier.
Eighteen months.
Far longer than anyone in the room could have imagined.
Margaret slowly looked up.
“You’ve… been seeing Olivia?”
Ethan swallowed.
“It’s complicated.”
The words had barely left his mouth before Margaret slapped him across the face.
The crack echoed through the dining room.
No one flinched.
No one stopped her.
“You dare say it’s complicated?”
Another slap.
“You destroyed your marriage.”
A third.
“You betrayed this family.”
Tears streamed down her face.
“I defended you.”
She pointed toward me.
“I blamed her.”
“I accused her.”
“I looked at the bruise on her face this morning and thought she deserved it.”
Her voice broke.
“My God…”
She turned to me.
“What have I done?”
I looked at her quietly.
“You believed the story that required the least courage.”
She lowered her eyes.
For the first time since I’d known Margaret Blackwood…
she looked ashamed.
Real shame.
Not embarrassment.
Not inconvenience.
Shame.
Daniel allowed the silence to linger.
Then he opened another folder.
“I wish the affair were the worst part.”
Everyone looked toward him.
“It isn’t.”
Ethan immediately stiffened.
“Daniel…”
“I wouldn’t.”
“You no longer get to tell people what they can or cannot do.”
Daniel placed several documents on the dining table.
Corporate filings.
Property deeds.
Wire transfer records.
Each one highlighted in yellow.
“I was hired six months ago by three minority shareholders who believed someone inside Blackwood Development was stealing company assets.”
He slid the first document toward Margaret.
“This warehouse.”
“The company paid eleven million dollars for it.”
Margaret nodded.
“I remember.”
“It was never worth more than four.”
Daniel turned another page.
“The seller?”
He pointed to a name.
Silver Crest Holdings.
Margaret frowned.
“I’ve never heard of them.”
“No.”
Daniel replied.
“You weren’t supposed to.”
He turned one final page.
“The owner of Silver Crest Holdings…”
He looked directly at Ethan.
“…is Ethan Blackwood.”
Margaret blinked.
“What?”
“It was registered through shell corporations in Wyoming, Delaware, and the Cayman Islands.”
He continued.
“The company purchased worthless properties using investor money.”
“Then sold them to itself at massively inflated prices.”
“The profits disappeared offshore.”
Margaret shook her head.
“No.”
Daniel didn’t react.
“We’ve traced more than twenty-eight million dollars.”
My eyes remained on Ethan.
He looked smaller now.
Not physically.
Emotionally.
The confidence that had always surrounded him like armor was beginning to crack.
Margaret whispered,
“You robbed your own company?”
“It wasn’t robbery.”
His answer came almost automatically.
“It was restructuring.”
Daniel smiled without humor.
“Federal prosecutors usually call it fraud.”
The deputy quietly added,
“And conspiracy.”
Ethan looked at me.
His expression changed.
The anger disappeared.
In its place came something else.
Desperation.
“Claire…”
His voice softened.
“We can fix this.”
I nearly laughed.
He still believed I was someone he could negotiate with.
“Can we?”
He nodded eagerly.
“Yes.”
“We’ve been through difficult times before.”
“No.”
I answered.
“You’ve put me through difficult times.”
“I simply survived them.”
He stepped closer.
Ignoring the deputy.
Ignoring Daniel.
Ignoring everyone else.
“I made mistakes.”
“I lost control.”
“I was under pressure.”
“I never meant for things to go this far.”
I folded my arms.
“Which part?”
“The affair?”
“The assault?”
“The theft?”
“The forged signatures?”
“The plan to have me declared mentally incompetent?”
His mouth opened.
Nothing came out.
“You don’t even know which crime you’re apologizing for.”
His shoulders sagged.
Then something unexpected happened.
He cried.
Real tears.
Margaret stared at him.
For years she’d believed her son incapable of weakness.
Now she watched him collapse into a dining chair, covering his face.
“I didn’t know how to stop.”
His voice cracked.
“It just kept getting bigger.”
“I borrowed money to cover losses.”
“Then I borrowed more.”
“The affair…”
He rubbed his eyes.
“…Olivia knew about the accounts.”
“I couldn’t leave her.”
“She would’ve exposed everything.”
Daniel remained expressionless.
“So instead…”
“You decided to sacrifice your wife.”
Ethan couldn’t answer.
Because it was true.
The room grew quiet again.
Rain continued tapping softly against the windows.
The biscuits had gone cold.
The coffee sat untouched.
Breakfast had become evidence.
Margaret slowly stood.
She removed the strand of pearls from around her neck.
The pearls Ethan had bought her years earlier.
She placed them carefully on the table.
“I’ve spent your entire life protecting you.”
She looked at him through tears.
“When your father wanted you punished, I defended you.”
“When teachers complained, I blamed them.”
“When girlfriends left, I called them ungrateful.”
“When Claire tried to tell me you frightened her…”
She closed her eyes.
“…I accused her of exaggerating.”
She shook her head.
“I didn’t raise a monster.”
“I created one.”
No one interrupted her.
She turned toward me.
“I cannot ask you to forgive me.”
“You shouldn’t.”
I replied gently.
“But I hope one day you’ll forgive yourself.”
Fresh tears rolled down Margaret’s face.
Daniel checked his watch.
“There is one final matter.”
Ethan looked up.
“What now?”
Daniel nodded toward the front windows.
“I believe they’re here.”
Everyone instinctively looked outside.
Three black SUVs had just turned into the long driveway.
Another followed behind them.
Then another.
Their dark windows reflected the gray morning sky.
The vehicles stopped one by one in front of the house.
Car doors opened in perfect sequence.
Men and women in dark suits stepped out.
Some carried briefcases.
Others carried evidence boxes.
One wore a jacket with large yellow letters across the back.
FBI.
Ethan stared through the window.
“No…”
he whispered.
“No, no, no…”
