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Condo Theft Uncovered Novel Cover

Condo Theft Uncovered

I stared at the notification in my hand, the words blurring as I read them for the fifth time. My heart pounded against my ribs like it was trying to escape the confines of my chest. "This notice is to inform you that ownership of Unit 1802, Skyline Tower has been transferred..." The elegant letterhead of Skyline Tower's management company seemed to mock me as I sat frozen behind my desk. My downtown condo—my sanctuary, my achievement, my pre-marital property—had been transferred to someone else? Impossible. I set the paper down with trembling hands, my legal mind already cataloging the impossibilities. I had never signed transfer documents. The condo was in my name only. I'd purchased it two years before marrying Marshall with money I'd saved from my first major case win. "Sofia?" My assistant knocked gently on my office door.
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Chapter 1

I stared at the notification in my hand, the words blurring as I read them for the fifth time. My heart pounded against my ribs like it was trying to escape the confines of my chest.

"This notice is to inform you that ownership of Unit 1802, Skyline Tower has been transferred..."

The elegant letterhead of Skyline Tower's management company seemed to mock me as I sat frozen behind my desk. My downtown condo—my sanctuary, my achievement, my pre-marital property—had been transferred to someone else? Impossible.

I set the paper down with trembling hands, my legal mind already cataloging the impossibilities. I had never signed transfer documents. The condo was in my name only. I'd purchased it two years before marrying Marshall with money I'd saved from my first major case win.

"Sofia?" My assistant knocked gently on my office door. "Your three o'clock is here."

"Reschedule," I managed, my voice sounding distant to my own ears. "Family emergency."

I gathered my belongings with mechanical precision, the habits of an organized attorney taking over while my emotions threatened to spiral. The certificates and awards lining my office walls—achievements Marshall had dismissed as "small-time work"—seemed to watch as I left.

The drive home was a blur of traffic lights and honking horns. I called the building management three times, each conversation ending with the same frustrating response: "The transfer appears legitimate, Ms. Romero. All paperwork was properly executed."

By the time I pulled into our driveway, fury had replaced shock. Marshall's car was already there—unusual for him to be home before seven. I slammed my car door with enough force to rattle the windows of our house.

I found him in the kitchen, casually sipping a glass of wine as if it were any ordinary evening.

"Did you know about this?" I thrust the notification toward him, watching his face carefully for any sign of surprise or confusion.

There was none. Instead, his expression shifted into something practiced—a look of mild concern that didn't reach his eyes.

"Ah, they sent that already?" He set his wine glass down carefully. "I was going to tell you tonight over dinner."

"Tell me what, exactly?" My voice was dangerously quiet.

Marshall's smile was smooth as polished marble. "It's good news, actually. I've been working on a surprise for us."

He approached me, hands outstretched in that placating gesture I'd seen him use with difficult clients. "I exchanged the downtown property for something better—a house in Westwood Hills. Three bedrooms, garden, the works."

"You...exchanged...my property?" Each word felt like glass in my mouth.

"Our future home." His voice softened as he took my hands in his. "I thought it was time we started thinking about a family. That condo was never going to be big enough for children."

I pulled my hands away, studying his face. After seven years of marriage, I knew Marshall's expressions intimately, or at least I thought I did. But something felt wrong—his steady gaze, the careful positioning of his body, the way his right foot tapped slightly against the kitchen tile.

"The condo was in my name," I said slowly. "You couldn't have transferred it without my signature."

"Legal technicalities." He waved dismissively. "I handled everything. You've been so busy with your cases, I didn't want to bother you with paperwork."

The casual dismissal of my profession—my passion—was nothing new, but combined with this violation, it ignited something fierce within me.

"Show me the documents for this supposed new house," I demanded.

"They're at my office." Too quick, too smooth. "I'll bring them home tomorrow. Let's celebrate tonight—I've made reservations at Vincenzo's."

I stepped back, my attorney instincts screaming warnings. Marshall was lying. The slight flush creeping up his neck, the way he wouldn't quite meet my eyes when mentioning the documents—all tells I'd learned to recognize in the courtroom.

"I need to see the property management office first thing tomorrow," I said, my voice steadier than I felt.

"Of course." His smile never wavered, but his eyes hardened slightly. "Whatever makes you comfortable, Sofia."

I barely slept that night, listening to Marshall's even breathing beside me and wondering how many other lies had I missed over the years. As dawn broke, I was already dressed and heading downtown, determined to uncover the truth about my stolen home.

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