
Fertility Fraud Doomed
Chapter 3
The call came at seven-thirty in the morning, three days after Ryan's pathetic attempt at damage control had exploded in his face across every news outlet in the city.
"Ms. Warren, this is Detective Martinez. We need you to come in. We've found something significant."
I set down my coffee cup, already reaching for my car keys. "How significant?"
"Significant enough that Dr. Woods is about to become the subject of a federal investigation. Can you be here in an hour?"
The police station buzzed with activity when I arrived. Martinez led me to a conference room where a woman in a crisp FBI windbreaker sat surrounded by boxes of evidence and multiple computer screens.
"Agent Rebecca Torres, FBI Financial Crimes Unit," she introduced herself. "We've been tracking an international organ trafficking ring for two years. Your case just gave us the break we needed."
She gestured to one of the screens showing encrypted files. "Dr. Woods wasn't just stealing eggs from you, Ms. Warren. She's been running a sophisticated operation, harvesting genetic material from dozens of her patients and selling it to wealthy clients overseas. Premium eggs from accomplished women—doctors, lawyers, executives. She was charging upward of fifty thousand dollars per retrieval."
The room tilted slightly. I gripped the edge of the table, processing the scope of Malia's betrayal. "How many patients?"
"Forty-three that we've identified so far. All professional women, all unknowingly violated." Agent Torres pulled up another file. "Your eggs specifically were sold to three different clients. She marketed you as 'Harvard-educated prosecutor, superior genetics, proven fertility.' You were one of her premium products."
My hands clenched into fists. The clinical language, the reduction of my identity to marketable traits—it was dehumanizing beyond anything I'd imagined. "Where are they now?"
"We're working with international partners to track them down. The good news is we caught this before any procedures were completed with your genetic material."
Detective Martinez slid a tablet across the table. "There's more. We found communications between Dr. Woods and your husband dating back eight months. This wasn't a recent conspiracy, Ms. Warren. They've been planning this for almost a year."
I scrolled through the messages, each one a knife twist in my chest. Ryan discussing my work schedule, my vulnerabilities, my desperate desire for children. Malia analyzing my psychological state, suggesting the best times to harvest additional eggs without my suspicion. They'd studied me like a mark, mapped out my weaknesses with surgical precision.
One message from Ryan made my blood freeze: "Once we get the surrogate pregnancy established, we can push the mental instability angle harder. Her family will cut financial support if they think she's having a breakdown. Then the company assets transfer clean."
Malia's response: "Perfect. I'll have the psychiatric evaluation ready. Postpartum depression, work stress, infertility trauma—plenty of medical justification for commitment if needed."
"They were planning to have me declared mentally incompetent," I said quietly.
"And steal everything you and your family had built," Martinez confirmed. "But they underestimated who they were dealing with."
My phone buzzed with a text from Marcus: "Emergency meeting. Ryan's PR disaster just got worse. Media wants your statement."
I stood, straightening my blazer with deliberate precision. "Agent Torres, I want to be kept informed of every development in this case. Detective Martinez, I assume you'll need additional statements from me?"
"Absolutely. We'll be in touch."
As I walked toward the exit, Martinez called after me. "Ms. Warren? For what it's worth, watching you dismantle their scheme has been the highlight of my career. They picked the wrong prosecutor to mess with."
I drove back to the office in silence, my mind already shifting into the focused clarity that had always served me best in the courtroom. The magnitude of Ryan and Malia's betrayal was staggering, but it had also revealed something important about myself.
For years, I'd balanced my career with the exhausting work of maintaining a marriage to a man who resented my success. I'd accommodated his ego, tolerated his mother's criticism, softened my edges to make space for his insecurities. I'd convinced myself that compromise was love, that diminishing myself was partnership.
Now, stripped of those illusions, I felt something I hadn't experienced in years: the pure, undiluted power of my own competence. No more divided attention, no more emotional energy wasted on people who saw my strength as a threat.
I was done being anyone's victim. Done being underestimated.
It was time to show them exactly what a prosecutor could do when she stopped holding back.
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