Then she looked at Sophie.
For months she had remained silent.
She stayed silent when Brandon came home smelling like another woman.
She stayed silent when Evelyn told her a wife should endure humiliation for the sake of the family name.
She stayed silent when photos appeared online showing Brandon conveniently vacationing in the same places as Vanessa.
But silence was never weakness.
It was preparation.
Natalie had been collecting evidence.
Screenshots.
Contracts.
Financial records.
Emails.
Hidden transfers.
Messages discussing how Brandon planned to remove her from the picture before the baby arrived.
What she didn’t know was that the betrayal ran even deeper.
Two days later, an unknown number called.
“Natalie, it’s Vanessa. Please don’t hang up.”
“I have nothing to say to you.”
“Neither do I. But Brandon lied to me too.”
They met at a quiet café.
Vanessa looked exhausted.
Gone was the confident woman from the conference room.
“Brandon told me you couldn’t have children,” she admitted. “He said your marriage existed only for appearances.”
Natalie remained silent.
Vanessa slid a USB drive across the table.
“I found this on his laptop.”
Inside were emails between Brandon, his lawyer, a notary, and Evelyn.
Properties were being transferred into shell companies in Austin.
Bank accounts were being emptied.
Assets were disappearing.
Natalie felt sick.
“His mother knew?”
Vanessa nodded.
“It was her idea.”
That evening, Natalie and Mr. Walker reviewed every file.
Property transfers.
Hidden accounts.
Fraudulent companies.
Messages discussing how to finalize the divorce before Sophie’s paperwork was completed.
Then they found an audio recording.
Evelyn’s voice filled the room.
“That child could belong to anyone. Brandon shouldn’t acknowledge her until Natalie signs everything.”
Natalie felt as though all the air had left her lungs.
Sophie was only days old.
Yet they already viewed her as a threat.
The following day Brandon appeared at her sister’s building.
He repeatedly buzzed the entrance.
“Natalie, let me see my daughter.”
She answered through the intercom.
“You’re not seeing her while you’re trying to leave her homeless.”
“You’re overreacting. You just had a baby.”
There it was.
The strategy.
Make her appear unstable.
“I’m not overreacting, Brandon. I’m finally paying attention.”
He slammed his hand against the door.
“You can’t keep me away from my child!”
Neighbors began watching.
Someone started recording.
Instantly Brandon changed his tone.
“Sweetheart, calm down. Everyone knows you haven’t been yourself lately.”
That same afternoon court documents arrived.
Brandon requested shared custody and a psychological evaluation of Natalie.
But one sentence froze her blood.
He was challenging Sophie’s paternity.
Natalie looked down at her sleeping daughter.
This fight was no longer about a house.
It was about protecting her child from a family that valued money above people.
Weeks later, the final hearing arrived.
Rain fell outside the courthouse as Natalie entered carrying Sophie.
Brandon arrived with Evelyn.