She poured water without turning. “That happens.”
“Interesting timing.”
She set the glass down too hard. “You think I know something about your contracts because I’m a lawyer?”
I met her eyes. “Should I?”
For a second, I thought she might tell the truth. Instead, she laughed—sharp, dismissive.
“You’re being paranoid, Daniel.”
That was when I realized how completely she thought she had me contained. Not just deceived—managed.
So I stopped asking her for answers and went where answers leave evidence.
I hired a forensic investigator, Paula Reyes. Former federal fraud analyst. Expensive. Worth it.
Within a week, she found enough to destroy two households and a corporation.
Claire and Ethan had been meeting for at least seven months. More importantly, a shell company in Delaware had been routing payments to an account Claire controlled under her maiden name. The total—just under one hundred eighty thousand dollars. Around those same dates, confidential files from my company’s network had been accessed through our home office late at night.
I felt sick reading it.
I had logged into the system from our home desktop months ago. I remembered Claire bringing me tea, standing behind me while I worked.
I had thought it was affection.
It had been access.
Paula’s final note confirmed it: Ethan was already under internal review for vendor manipulation and suspicious financial activity.
Claire hadn’t made one bad choice.