I opened my phone again. Pulled up a screen he didn’t know existed.
A security log I’d set up months ago. One that tracked every login attempt. Every device that accessed my accounts. Every transaction that required authorization.
Michael leaned forward, trying to see what I was looking at.
I turned the screen so he could read it clearly.
There it was. An unfamiliar device. Logged in at 1:11 AM. Location: St. Mary’s Hospital, Room 347.
Then the four transfers. All initiated within six minutes.
But there was one more detail. One critical piece of information that changed everything.
Transaction Status: PENDING VERIFICATION.
Michael’s face went pale. “What does that mean?”
“It means,” I said calmly, “that you triggered the transfers. But they never completed.”
“That’s impossible. I used your fingerprint—”
“My fingerprint opens my phone. It starts the transfer process. But it doesn’t complete large transactions.”
His hand tightened around his coffee cup. “You’re lying.”
“Am I?”
I scrolled down to show him the security question that had been waiting for approval since 1:17 AM.
Large transfer detected. Please answer security question to proceed:
What is the name of the attorney who drafted your prenuptial agreement?
Michael stared at the screen. “We don’t have a prenup.”
“You don’t have a prenup,” I corrected. “I do.”
The color drained completely from his face.
“My father insisted on it before we got married. Remember? You were so offended. Said it meant I didn’t trust you.”
“You told me you didn’t sign it,” he whispered.
“I lied.”
He stood up so fast his chair scraped against the floor. “You can’t—”
“I can. And I did. And the attorney’s name is James Sterling. Would you like me to type it in?”
Before he could respond, Eleanor burst into the room.
She was smiling. Triumphant. Holding her phone up like a trophy.
“It’s done,” she announced. “The sellers accepted our offer. No complications. No mess.” She looked at me with barely concealed contempt. “You just sign the divorce papers and move on with your pathetic little life.”
I nodded slowly. Let her think I was defeated. Broken.
“You’re right,” I said quietly.
Eleanor’s smile widened. “Finally. Some sense.”
“I should move on.”
“Exactly. Michael deserves better than—”
I tapped my phone screen.
Three options appeared.
[Reject Transfers]
[Report Fraud]
[Lock All Accounts]
I selected all three.
My phone vibrated once. Twice. Three times.
Confirmation messages appeared in rapid succession.
Transactions cancelled.
Fraud investigation initiated.
Accounts locked. Contact support to unlock.
Eleanor’s phone rang. Loud and shrill in the quiet hospital room.
She answered it, still smiling. “Hello? Yes, this is Eleanor Garrett—what? No, there must be some mistake—”
Her face changed. Went from smug to confused to horrified in the span of seconds.
“What do you mean fraud department? The fingerprint was—she’s my daughter-in-law, she authorized—”
“Hang up,” Michael said urgently. “Mom, hang up the phone—”
But Eleanor kept talking, her voice rising with each word. “I don’t understand. The down payment was approved. We signed the—”
“HANG UP!” Michael shouted.
The nurse rushed in, alarmed by the noise. “Is everything okay in here?”
I looked at her calmly. “Could you please call security?”
“What? Why—”
“These people attempted to steal my money while I was sedated. I’d like them removed from my room.”
Leave a Comment