My mother-in-law sl:ammed a hot iron onto the kitchen table beside a stack of custody papers and smiled as if she had already won. “Sign the custody papers,” she said, sliding a pen toward me. “or you’ll regret refusing me.” — Part 2

“And you two stay exactly where you are.”

One of them attempted a laugh. “Captain, this is a family matter.”

Ryan looked straight at him. “No. This is attempted extortion, fraud, unlawful restraint, and a threat against a pregnant woman. Sit down.”

The man sat.

Victoria regained herself first. She always did. Her chin rose, her pearls gleaming against her throat.

“She’s manipulating you,” she snapped. “I was protecting your child. She forged documents. She planned to run away with the baby and your money.”

I almost laughed. Even with the iron still gripped in her hand, she was trying to make herself the victim.

Ryan’s gaze moved to me.

“Emily,” he said gently, “are you hurt?”

I shook my head, though my throat stung. “Not yet.”

That cracked something in his expression.

Only for an instant.

Then he became the officer again.

He took a measured step toward the table, picked up the fake death certificate, and looked it over. His jaw tightened.

“You used my name,” he said to Victoria. “You faked my death.”

“I had to!” she cried. “You were throwing everything away on her. The house, the benefits, the family name—”

“The family name?” Ryan asked softly. “You mean the trust?”

Victoria went still.

There it was. The first true fracture.

Ryan turned toward the two men. “You told her, didn’t you? You told her the Hale family trust activates when my first child is born.”

Neither man spoke.

I finally raised my head.

“That was your mistake,” I said.

Victoria stared at me, stunned by how steady my voice sounded.

I rested one hand over my belly and used the other to push the pen away.

“You thought I was alone. You thought I was just a frightened wife who didn’t understand legal documents.” I nodded toward the fake certificate. “But Ryan and I already amended the trust six weeks ago.”

Ryan’s eyes softened with pride.

Victoria’s mouth parted.

I continued, “The trust no longer transfers through bloodline control. It goes into a protected education and medical fund for our child, managed by an independent fiduciary. Not you. Not Ryan. Not me.”

The room fell silent except for the hiss of the iron.

Ryan added, “And the military police already know I’m alive. I came home early because Emily sent my command copies of the forged documents.”

Victoria’s eyes flicked toward the door.

That was when the sirens started.

Distant at first.

Then growing closer.

Ryan extended his hand. “Put down the iron, Mother.”

For the first time in all the years I had known her, Victoria Hale looked afraid.

Part 3

Victoria did not lower the iron.

Instead, she lifted it higher, panic twisting her beautiful face into something hideous.

Continue to Part 3 Part 2 of 3

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