Chapter 4: The Digital Paper Trail
Linda stepped around her husband, her voice sharpening into a jagged edge. “Emily, you cannot stand in this kitchen and baselessly accuse my son of—”
“I don’t need to hurl accusations,” I cut her off, my voice steady and completely devoid of emotion. “I simply possess the proof.”
I reached into the pocket of my silk robe and withdrew my smartphone. I tapped the screen awake, bypassed the lock, and opened a dedicated, hidden photo album.
A neat, chronological grid of high-resolution screenshots illuminated the screen. There were Brooke’s desperate, late-night text messages to Jason’s number. There was the PDF confirmation for the weekend suite at the Annapolis Waterfront Hotel. And there, taking up the center of the grid, was a mirror selfie Brooke had taken two weeks ago. She was standing right upstairs in my guest bedroom, smiling seductively, while my custom monogrammed bathrobe hung visibly on the door hook right behind her shoulder like a stolen trophy.
I didn’t shove the screen in their faces. I didn’t wave it around like a frantic prosecutor. I simply laid the phone flat on the Carrera marble, the screen glowing brightly toward them.
Jason stared down at the digital mosaic of his own destruction. His mouth opened, but no sound emerged. “You… you hired a private investigator? You went through my phone?”
“No, Jason,” I sighed, a profound wave of exhaustion briefly washing over me. “I didn’t have to hire anyone. You routinely used our shared, cloud-synced iPad in the living room. You were never exceptionally careful. You were just astronomically, foolishly confident.”
Frank’s arms finally dropped from his chest, hanging limply at his sides. He looked at the screenshots, then looked at the son he had just driven two hours to support. “Jason,” Frank breathed, a deep, resonant disappointment fracturing his voice. “What the hell is this?”
Jason swallowed audibly. The muscles in his neck strained as he lifted his chin, adopting the posture of a desperate actor trying to remember lines from a play that had already been canceled.
“This doesn’t matter,” Jason snapped, aggressively pointing a finger at me. “It changes nothing. I am divorcing her. This marriage is over. She cannot legally just kick my own parents out onto the street—”
“Actually,” I interrupted, slicing through his panic, “I absolutely can.”
I reached out and tapped the heavy brass deadbolt on the front door behind them.
“You and your parents possess exactly thirty days to vacate the premises once you are officially served with an eviction notice,” I explained, citing the Maryland housing codes my attorney had meticulously reviewed with me on Tuesday. “Brooke, however, possesses zero days. She is not a tenant. She is a trespasser. And regarding the locks?” I tapped the deadbolt a second time. “The locksmith is scheduled to arrive at noon today.”
Linda took a sudden, aggressive step toward me. Her hands were trembling with a toxic mixture of humiliation and unadulterated fury. “After everything we did for you? After we welcomed you into this family?”
“Everything you did for me?” I echoed, my voice finally rising just a fraction, allowing a sliver of the suppressed anger to bleed through. “Let’s review the tape, Linda. You criticized my cooking at every holiday. You constantly belittled my career in corporate finance. You made passive-aggressive comments about my body, my lack of children, and my deceased family. You treated me strictly as an accessory to Jason’s life, a wallet to be drained, never as a human being.”
Jason raised his hands in a placating gesture, shifting his tone into the soft, manipulative cadence he used to extract favors. “Emily… Em, come on. Let’s take a breath. We can talk about this. We can sit down and work something out.”
I tilted my head, studying him as if he were a fascinating, repulsive insect pinned to a corkboard. “Work something out? You mean, work something out the way you secretly collaborated with a lawyer to draft those divorce papers overnight while I was paying your debts?”
He flinched, physically recoiling from the truth.
“And speaking of the debt,” I added, stepping around the island, cutting off the distance between us. I watched his hazel eyes widen in apprehension. “The hundred and fifty thousand dollars you demanded I pay off? It was never a gift, Jason.”
“What do you mean?” he stammered.
“I didn’t use liquid savings,” I explained slowly, ensuring the financial reality crushed him with maximum efficiency. “I paid your creditors utilizing a home-equity line of credit. A HELOC. Secured against this house. My house. Which effectively means the bank didn’t forgive your debt, Jason. I did. I bought your debt. I own it. And now, I am going to collect.”
Brooke’s voice emerged from the archway, thin and vibrating with sudden terror. “Collect… how?”
I smiled, a predatory, chilling expression that felt entirely foreign to my face. “By ensuring the people who labeled me ‘useless’ receive a comprehensive, agonizing education on what useful actually looks like in a court of law.”
Chapter 5: The Legal Exorcism
For ten agonizing seconds, the kitchen was perfectly static. No one dared to inhale. The rhythmic ticking of the antique wall clock suddenly sounded like the heavy, echoing footsteps of an approaching executioner.
Then, Jason laughed.
It was a sharp, brittle sound that shattered the silence. It was too fast, bordering on manic.
“You honestly think you’re some kind of untouchable mastermind?” Jason sneered, attempting to reassert his dominance through volume. “Fine. You want to play hardball? I’ll leave. But you are going to deeply regret this when you wake up and realize you cannot single-handedly float the mortgage on a house this size without my income.”
I gracefully folded my hands together, resting them against the cool marble.
“There is no mortgage, Jason,” I stated simply. “I paid the house off in cash four years ago. The only encumbrance on this property is the line of credit I just opened to bail you out. A line of credit I can easily liquidate by liquidating my stock portfolio whenever I choose.”