PART 3
“Sarah, are you expecting someone?”
Emily’s voice floated up the stairs.
The knocking came again.
Three slow strikes.
A pause.
Then three more.
My phone felt slippery in my hand as I stared at the warning on the screen.
Do not open the door. Derek knows I contacted you.
“Emily,” I called, trying to keep my voice steady. “Step away from the door.”
“What?”
“Don’t touch it.”
I hurried downstairs, one hand gripping the railing and the other pressed protectively against my stomach.
Emily stood in the foyer holding the baseball bat she had brought with her.
For once, I did not find it funny.
The person outside knocked again.
Then Derek’s voice came through the door.
“Sarah, open up.”
Every muscle in my body tightened.
Emily raised the bat.
“Absolutely not.”
A second voice spoke from outside.
“Mrs. Collins? Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police. We need to speak with you.”
I looked through the narrow window beside the door.
Two uniformed officers stood on the porch.
Derek was behind them.
He wore dark trousers, a pale-blue shirt, and the concerned expression he used whenever he wanted strangers to believe he was the reasonable one.
My mother-in-law stood near the driveway.
She clutched her handbag against her chest, watching the house as if she had come to witness something she had already arranged.
“What did he tell them?” Emily whispered.
“I don’t know.”
Derek leaned toward the door.
“Sarah, please. We’re worried about you.”
The gentleness in his voice made my skin crawl.
I opened my phone and called Mia.
She answered immediately.
“Do not let him inside,” she said after I explained. “You may speak to the officers through the door. Record everything.”
I turned on the camera and opened the door only as far as the security chain allowed.
One of the officers stepped forward.
He was tall, with gray at his temples and a nameplate that read BARNES.
“Mrs. Collins?”
“Yes.”
“I’m Detective Barnes. This is Officer Lewis. Your husband requested a welfare check.”
“My estranged husband,” I corrected.
Derek looked wounded.
“She hasn’t been acting like herself,” he said. “She’s pregnant, emotionally distressed, and sending paranoid messages.”
“What messages?” I demanded.
Barnes raised one hand.
“Let’s keep this calm.”
“I am calm.”
Derek shook his head sadly.
“This is what I mean. She doesn’t realize how frightened everyone is.”
Emily moved into view beside me.
“She’s frightened because you’ve been harassing her.”
My mother-in-law called from the driveway.
“That woman is filling Sarah’s head with poison.”
Emily’s grip tightened around the bat.
“Say that again.”
“Emily,” I warned.
Barnes looked between us.
“Mrs. Collins, have you threatened to harm yourself or anyone else?”
“No.”
“Do you have weapons in the house?”
“No.”
Derek spoke quickly. “She has access to prescription medication.”
“I take prenatal vitamins.”
“And anxiety medication,” he added.
I stared at him.
“I have never taken anxiety medication.”
His expression did not change.
“Sarah, there’s no shame in needing help.”
Mia’s voice came through my phone.
“Detective Barnes, this is Mia Carter, Mrs. Collins’s attorney.”
Barnes glanced at the screen.
“Counselor.”
“My client denies making any threats. Mr. Collins is under notice not to enter the residence without prior arrangement. Is there a specific emergency?”
Derek stepped closer.
“She sent me a message saying this won’t end the way I think.”
I almost laughed.
“That was your message to me.”
“No, Sarah.”
“Yes, it was.”
“Do you have the message?” Barnes asked.
I pulled up the exchange.
There it was.
Derek’s number.
His words.
This won’t end the way you think.
My response beneath it:
No, it won’t.
I held the screen toward the officers.
Barnes read it.
Officer Lewis looked at Derek.
Derek’s face tightened.
“She deleted the earlier messages.”
“There were no earlier messages.”
“She has another phone.”
“I don’t.”
My mother-in-law walked closer.
“She has been unstable for years.”
Something about the way she said it made my blood run cold.
Not worried.
Not uncertain.
Prepared.
As if she had rehearsed those exact words.
Mia heard it too.
“Detective,” she said, “this appears to be an attempt to create a record questioning my client’s mental stability during active divorce proceedings.”
Derek scoffed.
“That’s ridiculous.”
“Then you won’t object to leaving.”
Barnes studied me.
“May we come inside and confirm that everyone is safe?”
Mia answered before I could.
“My client does not consent to a search.”
“It’s not a search,” Barnes said. “It’s a welfare check.”
“Then you have confirmed she is conscious, coherent, represented by counsel, and denying any danger.”
Derek stepped forward.
“I need my passport and medication.”
“You said you came because you were worried about me,” I said.
“I can be worried and still need my property.”
“You came for your passport three nights ago.”
“You refused to give it to me.”
“You searched the study yourself.”
Barnes looked at him.
“You have already entered the residence since separating?”
Derek hesitated.
“Once.”
“Without arrangement?”
“It’s my house too.”
Mia’s voice sharpened.
“Detective, there is a pending request for exclusive use of the residence because Mr. Collins has been intimidating my client.”
“I never intimidated her.”
“You grabbed my wrist at the clinic,” I said.
My mother-in-law made a disgusted sound.
“Oh, for heaven’s sake. He touched his own wife.”
The words struck me harder than they should have.
Not because they surprised me.
Because they revealed exactly how she viewed me.
Not as a person.
As property.
Barnes finally turned toward Derek.
“Mr. Collins, this is becoming a civil dispute. Unless you have evidence of an immediate threat, you need to leave.”
“I received a call from her doctor.”
My heart stopped.
“What doctor?”
Derek’s eyes flickered.
“My doctor never called you.”
“Someone from the clinic said she was concerned.”
“Which clinic?” Barnes asked.
Derek did not answer.
Mia spoke through the phone.
“Mr. Collins, falsely claiming communication from a medical provider is serious.”
“I didn’t say the doctor personally called.”
“You just did,” Emily said.
Derek’s face darkened.
For one second, the wounded husband disappeared.
The real man looked through.
Cold.
Angry.
Calculating.
Then his expression softened again.
“I only want Sarah to be safe.”
I met his eyes.
“No. You want someone to write down that I’m unstable.”
Silence settled over the porch.
My mother-in-law stopped moving.
Derek said nothing.
That silence told me more than a confession could have.
Barnes exhaled.
“Everyone needs to separate for the evening.”
He instructed Derek and his mother to leave.
Derek walked down the steps slowly.
At the bottom, he turned around.
His gaze shifted from me to my stomach.
Then he smiled.
Not warmly.
Not lovingly.
It was the smile of a man who believed he had placed the first piece on a chessboard.
“We’ll talk soon,” he said.
“No,” Mia replied through the phone. “You will communicate through counsel.”
Derek looked directly at the camera in my hand.
Then he left.
I locked the door.
Emily lowered the bat.
“That was not a welfare check.”
“No.”
“That was a performance.”
“Yes.”
My phone vibrated.
The unknown number.
He needed the police report. It is part of the custody plan.
I typed quickly.
Who are you?
This time, the answer came.
Someone he destroyed before he married you.
That night, Emily and I searched the house.
We checked windows.
Doors.
The attic.
The garage.
Every cabinet in Derek’s study.
I felt foolish at first.
Then Emily noticed that the smoke detector above the desk looked newer than the others.
She dragged over a chair and twisted it from the ceiling.
A tiny black lens stared back at us.
We both froze.
“That’s a camera,” Emily whispered.
My stomach turned.
The device had been positioned to capture the desk, the computer, and anyone sitting in the chair.
“Don’t touch anything else,” Mia said when I called her. “Photograph it where it is.”
We found a second device beneath the living-room bookshelf.
Then a microphone taped behind the headboard in my bedroom.
My bedroom.
The room where I had cried.
The room where I had whispered to my unborn babies.
The room where I had talked to Emily and Mia.
Derek had been listening.
Watching.
Waiting for me to say something he could use.
I sat on the edge of the bed, shaking.
“How long?” I asked.
Emily stood beside me.
“How long has he been recording me?”
She did not answer.
Neither of us wanted to guess.
A digital-forensics specialist arrived the next morning.
He removed the devices and examined our wireless network.
“The cameras were transmitting to a cloud account,” he said.
“Can you find out whose account?”
“Possibly, with legal process.”
“Were they recently installed?”
He studied one of the devices.
“This model was released almost three years ago.”
Three years.
Derek had been watching me long before he left.
Long before the fake vasectomy.
Long before the pregnancy.
Maybe even while he was telling me that our marriage was fine.
The anonymous number sent another message.
Tomorrow. Eleven a.m. First Citizens Bank lobby on Tryon Street. Come with your attorney. Do not tell the police.
Mia read the message twice.
“It could be a trap.”
“It could be the only person who knows what Derek planned.”
“We’re not going alone.”
The next morning, Mia arranged for a private investigator named Marcus Reed to sit across the lobby pretending to read a newspaper.
Emily waited in a car nearby.
I sat beside Mia beneath a chandelier, watching people pass through the revolving doors.
At exactly eleven, a woman entered.
She was in her early forties.
Tall.
Thin.
Dark hair pulled tightly behind her head.
She wore sunglasses despite the cloudy weather.
When she removed them, I saw a pale scar running from her left eyebrow toward her temple.
She stopped when she saw me.
For several seconds, neither of us spoke.
Then she said, “You look like I did.”
A chill passed through me.
“Who are you?”
She sat across from us.
“My name is Rachel Lawson.”
Mia opened her notebook.
“How do you know Derek?”
Rachel looked at me.
“I was married to him.”
The bank lobby seemed to tilt.
“That’s impossible.”
“He told you he had never been married before.”
“Yes.”
“He lies.”
“When?”
“Twelve years ago. We were married for nineteen months.”
I stared at her.
“His last name was Collins.”
“He used Derek Cole professionally during that period. Cole is his middle name.”
“Why didn’t I find anything?”
“Our marriage record was sealed after an identity-theft investigation. His mother paid my attorney to push everything through quietly.”
“Identity theft?”
Rachel gave a humorless smile.
“Mine.”
She opened her handbag and placed a photograph on the table.
Derek looked younger, but it was him.
He stood beside Rachel outside a courthouse.
My mother-in-law stood behind them.
Jessica stood at the edge of the photograph.
My breath caught.
“She knew him then?”
“Jessica has known Derek since they were teenagers.”
“He told me they met at work.”
“They began working together because his mother arranged it.”
Rachel pulled out another photograph.
Jessica was standing in my wedding venue.
The same expression I had seen in the photograph sent to my phone.
Watching.
Waiting.
“Why was she at my wedding?”
“To make sure Derek went through with it.”
I felt sick.
Mia leaned forward.
“Mrs. Lawson, begin at the start.”
Rachel’s hands trembled as she folded them together.
“I met Derek when I was twenty-seven. My father had died six months earlier and left me a small commercial property. Derek was charming. Patient. He made me feel protected.”
I thought of the early years of my own marriage.
Derek bringing me coffee in bed.
Derek calling me his future.
Derek telling me that no one understood him the way I did.
Rachel continued.
“He convinced me to refinance the property. He said we would use the money to start a business. Then he began telling friends that I was depressed. Unstable. Drinking too much.”
“Were you?”
“No. But after hearing it repeatedly, people began interpreting everything I did as proof.”
My skin prickled.
“He isolated you,” I said.
“Yes.”
Her eyes met mine.
“Then he created an affair.”
“What do you mean?”
“He accused me of sleeping with a contractor. There were messages on my phone that I never sent. Photographs taken from angles that made ordinary meetings look secretive. His mother told everyone I had destroyed the marriage.”
“And Jessica?”
“She became the supportive family friend. She sat beside Derek during meetings with attorneys. She told people she had witnessed my behavior.”
Exactly as she had done to me.
Rachel reached beneath her sleeve and touched an old mark on her wrist.
“Derek told me that if I signed over the property and accepted a confidential settlement, he would stop exposing me publicly. I signed.”
“What happened afterward?” Mia asked.
“He emptied the accounts. The contractor he accused me of sleeping with admitted Derek had paid him to create the photographs. I went to the police, but most of what Derek did looked like a marital dispute. Bad behavior. Manipulation. Nothing easy to prosecute.”
“Why didn’t you warn me?”
“I tried.”
I frowned.
“When?”
“Before your wedding.”
Rachel pointed toward the old photograph.
“I came to the venue. Derek’s mother recognized me before I reached you. She threatened to have me arrested. She said if I interfered, she would release private recordings from my marriage.”
“The cameras,” I whispered.
Rachel nodded.
“He recorded me too.”
I felt as though I were looking into my own future.
“What happened to the commercial property?”
“Derek sold it. The money disappeared through several companies.”
“And you have been following him ever since?”
“Not continuously. I rebuilt my life. I moved away. But three years ago, a woman named Amanda Brooks contacted me.”
Rachel removed another photograph.
A smiling blonde woman stood outside a lake house.
“Derek dated her before you.”
“He was with me three years ago.”
“He told Amanda he was separated.”
My throat tightened.
“What happened to her?”
“She died.”
Mia’s pen stopped moving.
“How?”
“Her car went off a road near Asheville.”
“Was Derek investigated?”
“The police ruled it an accident. Amanda had alcohol in her system.”
Rachel’s expression hardened.
“She did not drink.”
The noise of the bank faded around me.
“Did Amanda own property?”
“A lake house.”
My heart pounded.
“What happened to it?”
“She had recently added Derek as a joint owner.”
Mia’s voice became careful.
“Are you saying you believe Mr. Collins killed her?”
“I’m saying Amanda contacted me three days before she died and told me Derek was pressuring her to sign documents. She said he had created fake messages to make her look suicidal.”
The welfare check flashed through my mind.
The prescription medication Derek claimed I used.
My mother-in-law saying I had been unstable for years.
It was not improvisation.
It was a script.
Mia closed her notebook.
“Why contact Sarah now?”
Rachel reached into her bag again.
This time, she removed a flash drive.
“Because Derek made a mistake.”
“What mistake?”
“He used the same storage company he used during our marriage. The manager remembered me. When Derek stopped paying for one of the units, they contacted the old secondary number listed on the original account.”
“Your number?”
“Yes.”
“What was inside?”
“Documents. Computers. Photographs. Files on several women.”
She placed the drive between us.
“Your name was one of them.”
I could not move.
“What did the file say?”
Rachel looked at my stomach.
“It said the pregnancy would begin Phase Three.”
We returned to Mia’s office.
Marcus checked the flash drive for malicious software before opening it on an isolated computer.
The screen filled with folders.
RACHEL L.
AMANDA B.
SARAH M.
JESSICA H.
There were seven other names I did not recognize.
Each folder contained photographs, financial records, medical information, social media posts, property estimates, and personal notes.
Women reduced to spreadsheets.
Assets.
Weaknesses.
Family relationships.
Derek had documented everything.
Mia opened my folder.
The first file was titled:
TARGET PROFILE — SARAH MILLER
Target.
Not wife.
Not Sarah.
Target.
My age.
Education.
Employment history.
My father’s death.
The life-insurance money I had used as a down payment on our house.
My relationship with Emily.
Even notes about my mother’s early death and my fear of abandonment.
Derek had known exactly where I was vulnerable before our first date.
I covered my mouth.
“He studied me.”
Rachel sat beside me.
“He studies everyone.”
Another document contained a timeline.
Phase One: Emotional dependency.
Phase Two: Financial consolidation and social isolation.
Phase Three: Infidelity trigger and public credibility collapse.
Phase Four: Property transfer and custody leverage.
My heart slammed against my ribs.
“Custody leverage?”
Mia opened a file labeled PREGNANCY EVENT.
The fake vasectomy was listed inside.
There were instructions.
Schedule consultation.
Obtain consent paperwork.
Avoid procedure.
Create visible recovery symptoms.
Refuse follow-up examination.
If pregnancy occurs, immediately establish presumed infidelity.
Move funds before disclosure.
Present settlement while subject is emotionally distressed.
Use public humiliation to accelerate signature.
Jessica’s name appeared beside several tasks.
Prepare alternative residence.
Confirm social-media messaging.
Attend settlement meeting as emotional pressure.
I remembered her sitting across from me in the coffee shop.
Her flat stomach.
Her smug smile.
She had not merely accompanied Derek.
She had been assigned a role.
“She knew,” I whispered.
Rachel did not answer.
Mia opened another document.
It was a draft statement written for my mother-in-law.
Sarah has always struggled with emotional instability. My son tried to protect her from public embarrassment, but her behavior became increasingly unpredictable after the pregnancy.
Another document had been written for one of our neighbors.
Another for Derek’s manager.
Another for Jessica.
They had prepared witnesses before I even knew I was pregnant.
I stood abruptly.
“I need air.”
Mia caught my arm.
“Sarah.”
“I was sleeping beside him.”
My voice broke.
“I was planning dinners. Washing his clothes. Asking if he wanted to go away for our anniversary. And he was writing instructions for how to destroy me.”
Rachel’s eyes filled with tears.
“That is how he does it.”
Mia clicked on Jessica’s folder.
Unlike mine, it was incomplete.
The first document was titled:
SECONDARY ASSET / LIABILITY TRANSFER
Jessica’s father had died the year before.
He had left her an inheritance of more than four hundred thousand dollars.
Jessica had also opened a consulting company at Derek’s request.
The company had received several transfers from our missing accounts.
“She doesn’t know,” I said.
Mia frowned.
“She may know some of it.”
“But not this.”
A note beside the company name read:
Use JH entity as transfer channel. Establish sole responsibility if questioned.
Derek planned to blame Jessica for the missing money.
Another note read:
Marriage possibility only if inheritance clears. Avoid legal commitment before funds become accessible.
Jessica believed Derek had chosen her because he loved her.
He had chosen her because she had money.
And because when the investigation came, her name would be attached to everything.
Rachel leaned toward the screen.
“He always needs someone ready to take the fall.”
My phone rang.
Jessica.
I stared at her name.
Mia nodded toward the conference room.
“Answer. Put it on speaker.”
I accepted the call.
“Sarah?”
Jessica’s voice was barely audible.
“Yes.”
“I need to talk to you.”
“You have an attorney?”
“No.”
“Get one.”
“I can’t talk to an attorney.”
“Why?”
“Derek checks my phone.”
I looked at the flash drive.
“Then why are you calling me?”
“Because I found an account.”
“What account?”
“One in my company’s name. There’s more than ninety thousand dollars in it.”
“It came from us.”
Silence.
“What?”
“Derek used your company to move money from our marriage.”
“No. He said it was consulting income.”
“For what work?”
“He handled the contracts.”
“Did you perform any work?”
She said nothing.
I felt no satisfaction.
Only exhaustion.
“You helped him destroy me,” I said.
“I didn’t know about the money.”
“You knew the vasectomy was fake.”
Her breathing stopped.
That was answer enough.
Mia wrote a note and slid it toward me.
Keep her talking.
“Why did you help him?” I asked.
Jessica began crying.
“He told me the procedure had failed.”
“That isn’t what the documents say.”
“What documents?”
“He never had it.”
“I know that now.”
“But you knew before the ultrasound.”
“I knew he had not gone to the follow-up.”
“No. You knew there was no procedure.”
“I saw the bandages.”
“So did I.”
She sobbed quietly.
“He said he only wanted you to sign the house over. He said you would get enough money to start again.”
“You sat across from me while I was pregnant and told me signing away my home was healthy.”
“I’m sorry.”
“No, you’re scared.”
She did not deny it.
“Derek has files on you,” I continued. “Your inheritance. Your company. The transferred money.”
“What files?”
“He planned to make you responsible.”
“That’s a lie.”
“Then ask him why the company account is only in your name.”
Jessica’s breathing became fast and shallow.
“He said it protected me.”
“It protects him.”
Another long silence.
Then she whispered, “There’s something else.”
“What?”
“I heard Derek and his mother talking about your father.”
The room went still.
“My father has been dead for nine years.”
“They said he left something for your children.”
I glanced at Mia.
She began typing rapidly on her laptop.
“What did he leave?”
“I don’t know. A trust, maybe.”
“My father never told me about a trust.”
“They said it would open when you gave birth.”
My hand moved instinctively toward my stomach.
“What does Derek want with it?”
“He said the babies changed the timeline.”
“What timeline?”
“I don’t know.”
“Jessica.”
“I swear.”
A door slammed on her end of the call.
She gasped.
“I have to go.”
“Where are you?”
“I’ll contact you.”
“Jessica, do not go back to Derek.”
The line went dead.
Mia immediately called her investigator.
“Find her,” she said.
Then she looked at me.
“Did your father have an attorney?”
“Yes. Thomas Bell.”
“Call him.”
Thomas Bell had retired five years earlier.
When I reached him, his voice sounded older than I remembered.
“Sarah,” he said, “I wondered when you would contact me.”
My skin prickled.
“What does that mean?”
“Your father instructed me not to approach you unless certain conditions occurred.”
“What conditions?”
“Your thirty-fifth birthday or the birth of your first child.”
I gripped the edge of the table.
“I’m pregnant.”
Thomas was quiet.
“With twins.”
Another silence.
“I’m sorry,” he said. “I was not informed.”
“My husband may know about the trust.”
The chair creaked as Thomas shifted.
“How?”
“I don’t know.”
“Sarah, where are you?”
“With my attorney.”
“Good. Stay there.”
“What did my father leave?”
“Your father created a family trust intended to protect you and any future children. The assets have grown significantly.”
“How much?”
“Based on the last annual valuation, approximately eight-point-four million dollars.”
I could not speak.
Eight million dollars.
My father had lived modestly.
He drove the same truck for twelve years.
He clipped grocery coupons.
I had no idea he possessed that kind of wealth.
Thomas continued.
“The trust was structured to prevent a spouse from accessing the principal directly.”
“Then Derek can’t touch it.”
“Not as your husband.”
Relief entered my chest.
Then Thomas added, “But a legal guardian of your children may request distributions on their behalf.”
The relief vanished.
“Custody leverage,” Mia whispered.
Thomas heard her.
“Who said that?”
“Documents created by Sarah’s husband.”
“Sarah, listen carefully. If your husband knew about the trust, he would know that gaining primary custody could provide access to substantial annual distributions.”
“How would he know?”
“Someone accessed an electronic copy of the trust last year.”
“Who?”
“The login belonged to my former office administrator.”
“Can you contact her?”
“She died six months ago.”
A cold chill moved over me.
“How?”
“A fall at home.”
I looked at Rachel.
She had gone pale.
“Was her name Amanda?” she asked.
Thomas heard her.
“No. Linda Marsh.”
Rachel closed her eyes.
Another dead woman.
Another accident.
Mia took the phone.
“Mr. Bell, preserve all access logs and trust records. Do not communicate with Derek Collins, his attorney, or his family.”
“Understood.”
When the call ended, I returned to the flash drive.
The folder contained a copy of the trust.
Derek had highlighted the guardianship section.
Beside it, he had typed:
Primary custody required before first distribution.
Another document was titled:
MATERNAL FITNESS EVIDENCE
The welfare check was listed.
So were the cameras.
The supposed anxiety medication.
Planned testimony from his mother.
Statements from neighbors.
My social media activity.
Even a draft request for a psychological evaluation.
Derek was not trying to prove I had cheated anymore.
The DNA test had served its purpose.
It established that he was the babies’ father.
Now he intended to prove I was an unfit mother.
“He accused me publicly because he knew the test would clear me,” I said.
Mia looked at me.
“He wanted the paternity result.”
“Why?”
“To confirm his legal connection to the twins.”
Rachel’s voice was quiet.
“The infidelity accusation pressured you to sign away the house. When that failed, the positive paternity result gave him a path to the trust.”
My stomach twisted.
“My babies were never children to him.”
“No,” Mia said. “They were access.”
The temporary court hearing took place two days later.
Derek sat beside his attorney.
His mother sat behind him.
Jessica’s seat remained empty.
Derek looked tired.
Not broken.
Not ashamed.
Angry.
His attorney argued that I had become irrational after the pregnancy.
He cited the police welfare check.
He mentioned my refusal to let Derek enter the home.
He claimed I had threatened Jessica.
Mia stood slowly.
“Your Honor, the police report states that Mrs. Collins was calm, coherent, and denied making threats. It also notes that Mr. Collins provided no evidence of danger.”
The judge read the report.
Mia continued.
“We also have evidence that Mr. Collins installed unauthorized recording devices throughout the marital residence.”
Derek leaned toward his attorney.
The attorney’s face changed.
He had not known.
Mia submitted photographs of the cameras.
Then the financial transfers.
The lease application with Jessica.
The paternity result.
The clinic confirmation that no vasectomy had occurred.
Finally, she submitted the document titled MATERNAL FITNESS EVIDENCE.
Derek stood.
“That file is fabricated.”
His attorney grabbed his sleeve.
“Sit down.”
“I have never seen it.”
Mia looked at him.
“Then you will have no objection to a forensic examination of your computers and cloud accounts.”
Derek’s face went white.
The judge ordered the marital funds frozen.
He granted me temporary exclusive use of the house.
He prohibited Derek from contacting me directly.
He ordered both parties not to discuss the case publicly.
Then he leaned toward Derek.
“Mr. Collins, if the surveillance allegations are proven, you may face consequences beyond this divorce proceeding.”
Derek stared at me.
For the first time, I saw uncertainty in his eyes.
Outside the courtroom, reporters had gathered because of Derek’s social-media video.
Mia guided me toward a side exit.
My mother-in-law blocked the hallway.
“You think you have won,” she said.
“This isn’t a game.”
“Everything is a game when enough money is involved.”
Mia stepped between us.
“Do not speak to my client.”
My mother-in-law ignored her.
“You should have signed the papers at the coffee shop, Sarah.”
A camera flashed nearby.
I looked directly at her.
“You should not have underestimated me.”
Her mouth curved into a small smile.
“We didn’t.”
Then she walked away.
Her answer frightened me more than any threat Derek had made.
Jessica disappeared that evening.
Her phone went straight to voicemail.
She did not report to work.
Her apartment door was unlocked.
According to Marcus, several drawers had been emptied, but her suitcase remained in the closet.
Her car was missing.
Derek claimed he had not seen her.
His attorney sent a formal notice accusing me of harassment.
At midnight, an email arrived from Jessica’s account.
There was no message.
Only a video attachment.
I called Mia and waited until she and Emily were beside me before pressing play.
The video showed Derek and his mother seated in Jessica’s apartment.
It had been recorded secretly from somewhere near the kitchen.
The timestamp was three weeks earlier.
Jessica’s voice could be heard from behind the camera.
“What happens if Sarah refuses to sign?”
Derek answered.
“She won’t.”
“And if she does?”
His mother spoke.
“Then we proceed with the fitness strategy.”
“What if the judge doesn’t believe it?”
“We don’t need everyone to believe it,” Derek said. “We need enough doubt to keep her defending herself.”
Jessica’s voice became nervous.
“And the trust?”
“The children are beneficiaries,” his mother replied. “Once Derek has primary custody, the annual distributions can be approved.”
“How much?”
“More than enough.”
Jessica stepped into the frame.
“You told me this was about the house.”
Derek stood.
“It began with the house.”
“And me?”
“What about you?”
“Were you ever going to marry me?”
Derek smiled.
It was the same cold smile he had given me from the driveway.
“When the timing was right.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means stop asking questions.”
Jessica crossed her arms.
“I found the account in my company’s name.”
Derek’s smile disappeared.
“You went through my files?”
“My company. My name.”
His mother stood.
“You should be grateful. We gave you a future.”
“You put stolen money in my account.”
Derek moved closer.
“Lower your voice.”
“You used me.”
“You volunteered.”
Jessica’s face collapsed.
“I loved you.”
Derek laughed softly.
“No. You loved winning.”
The video shook as Jessica moved backward.
Then she asked the question I had been waiting to hear.
“Why did you choose me?”
Derek looked at his mother.
His mother answered.
“Because your father left you enough money to be useful and enough guilt to be controllable.”
Jessica began crying.
“You said Sarah was the liar.”
“Sarah was the target,” Derek said. “You were the exit.”
The video ended.
Emily covered her mouth.
Mia stared at the frozen screen.
Then another email appeared.
It had been scheduled to send automatically.
Sarah, if you received this, Derek knows I copied the files. I am going somewhere safe. Do not believe anything he says about me. The money was transferred through my company without my understanding. I helped him hurt you, and I will testify.
A second paragraph followed.
There is one thing I have not told you. Derek’s mother has someone inside the police department. I heard her call him Barnes.
I remembered the detective on my porch.
The gray at his temples.
The way he had asked about weapons.
The way Derek already seemed to know what questions would be asked.
My phone rang.
Unknown number.
I answered cautiously.
“Mrs. Collins?”
The voice was familiar.
Detective Barnes.
“We found Jessica Hart’s car.”
My hand tightened around the phone.
“Where?”
“Near a bus station outside the city.”
“Was she there?”
“No.”
“Is she hurt?”
“We don’t know.”
His tone became colder.
“We need to speak with you.”
“My attorney is here.”
“Good. We are on our way.”
Mia stood.
“Do not answer more questions.”
“What happened?” I asked.
Barnes hesitated.
“There was blood in the trunk.”
My stomach dropped.
“And a handwritten note.”
“What did it say?”
“That you forced her to help steal money from your husband.”
“That’s a lie.”
“We will discuss it when we arrive.”
He ended the call.
Twenty minutes later, police vehicles filled the street.
This time, Detective Barnes carried a search warrant.
Mia read it carefully.
“They are looking for Jessica’s personal property, financial records, and evidence related to her disappearance.”
“They think I hurt her?”
“They are building a theory.”
Barnes entered the house with six officers.
They searched the study.
The kitchen.
The garage.
My bedroom.
I followed with Mia while Emily recorded from a distance.
An officer crouched beside the bed.
He reached underneath and pulled out a clear plastic bag.
Inside was a silk scarf.
Dark red.
Stained with what looked like blood.
I had never seen it before.
Barnes looked at me.
“Do you recognize this?”
“No.”
Another officer opened the nightstand.
He removed a passport.
Derek’s passport.
The one he had claimed he could not find.
“That is not mine,” I said.
Barnes placed both items into evidence bags.
“You told us your husband searched for this passport several nights ago.”
“He planted it.”
“When?”
“The welfare check.”
“He never entered the house during the welfare check.”
“He entered before that.”
Barnes looked toward his notes.
“You allowed him to retrieve belongings.”
“He must have hidden it then.”
“And the scarf?”
“I have never seen it.”
Barnes watched me carefully.
“Jessica was photographed wearing this scarf two days ago.”
I felt the room closing around me.
Derek had planned everything.
The police report.
The visit.
The planted passport.
The accusations of instability.
Even Jessica’s disappearance was becoming part of his story.
Mia stepped forward.
“My client is not answering additional questions.”
Barnes ignored her.
“Mrs. Collins, do you know where Jessica Hart is?”
“No.”
“Did she visit this house?”
“No.”
“Did you threaten her?”
“No.”
Mia repeated, “The interview is over.”
Barnes nodded slowly.
“For now.”
He signaled to another officer.
“We need Mrs. Collins to accompany us to the station.”
“Is she under arrest?” Mia demanded.
“Not at this time.”
“Then she is not going anywhere.”
Barnes stared at her.
Before he could respond, my phone vibrated in my hand.
A new email from Jessica.
Scheduled delivery.
I opened it.
Sarah, I am alive. If police found my scarf or Derek’s passport in your house, Derek planted them. I saw him put both items into a cardboard box before he visited you.
My breath caught.
The cardboard box.
The night Derek entered the house claiming to collect his belongings.
There was more.
Do not tell Detective Barnes where I am. He works for Derek’s mother.
Then one final line appeared.
The person standing beside him is the one who killed Amanda.
I slowly raised my eyes.
Detective Barnes stood near the doorway.
Beside him was Officer Lewis.
The younger officer from the welfare check.
He was watching my phone.
Watching my face.
Then his hand moved toward the weapon at his waist.
And he smiled……………….
PART 4…
TO BE CONTINUED IN PART 4…