
His Mistress Stole My Paintings and My Life
Chapter 4
The envelope wasn’t delivered by a courier; it was served by a man with a face like a closed fist. He intercepted me in the lobby of Graham’s building, shoving the thick packet of documents against my chest before I could even reach for the door handle.
“Selene Hall? You’ve been served.”
I stood there, the marble floor cold beneath my sneakers, staring at the embossed seal of a law firm that probably charged more per hour than I made in a year. My hands trembled as I tore the seal. The words swam before my eyes, dense legalese designed to suffocate.
*Plaintiff: Ares Fernandez.*
*Defendant: Selene Hall.*
*Charges: Grand Larceny, Embezzlement, Fraud.*
The air left my lungs. I flipped the page, my eyes catching on a highlighted sum: $48,000.
“He’s suing me for rent?” I whispered, the absurdity tasting like bile.
According to the complaint, the money I had “spent” on groceries, utilities, and “unauthorized living expenses” while residing in the penthouse—which he claimed I knew was his property all along—constituted theft. He was twisting two years of domestic partnership into a corporate crime. Every carton of milk I bought, every lightbulb I changed, was now evidence of embezzlement.
My phone buzzed. A notification from my bank. *Alert: Account Frozen due to pending litigation.*
My blood ran cold. It wasn’t about the rent. It wasn’t about the money.
“Mom,” I choked out.
I didn’t wait for the elevator. I bolted for the street, flagging down a taxi with frantic waves. I threw my last twenty dollars of cash at the driver. “Oak Creek Care Facility. Drive fast.”
The ride upstate was a blur of gray highway and panic. I dialed the facility’s front desk three times, but each time I was put on an endless hold. When the taxi finally skidded onto the gravel driveway of the nursing home, the sun was already dipping below the tree line, casting long, skeletal shadows across the lawn.
I sprinted through the automatic doors, the smell of antiseptic and artificial lavender hitting me like a wall.
“I need to see Mary Hall,” I panted, leaning over the reception desk. “Room 304.”
The administrator, a woman named Mrs. Higgins who had always praised my devotion, didn’t smile. She didn’t even look up from her computer screen. She just slid a clipboard across the counter.
“I’m sorry, Ms. Hall. You’re not on the approved visitation list anymore.”
The world tilted. “What? I’m her daughter. I’m her power of attorney.”
“Not as of this morning,” Mrs. Higgins said, her voice tight, rehearsed. “The primary billing contact for Mrs. Hall’s care has been updated. The account was paid in full for the next twelve months by a Mr. Ares Fernandez. Per his instructions as the financial guarantor, visitation is restricted to approved medical personnel only.”
“He bought her?” My voice rose to a scream, raw and jagged. “She has Alzheimer’s! She doesn’t know him! You can’t let him do this!”
“Please lower your voice, or I’ll have to call security.” Mrs. Higgins finally looked at me, her eyes filled with a helpless pity that was worse than cruelty. “The legal paperwork is ironclad, Selene. If you try to enter the wing, we have to call the police.”
I gripped the edge of the counter until my knuckles turned white. Ares wasn’t just attacking my bank account; he was holding my mother hostage. He knew she was the only thing I had left to lose. He was waiting for me to crawl back, to trade my art and my dignity for five minutes with the woman who was slowly forgetting me.
I walked out of the facility, my legs numb, the winter wind biting through my coat. I collapsed onto a bench near the parking lot, burying my face in my hands.
“Selene.”
The voice was low, steady. I looked up. Graham was standing by his black sedan, his coat unbuttoned, his face a mask of controlled fury. beside him stood a man I didn’t know—sharp features, rimless glasses, and a suit that looked like armor.
“Get in the car,” Graham said gently, offering me a hand. “We’re not fighting this in the parking lot.”
Back in the silence of the limousine, Graham introduced the stranger. “This is Marcus Chen. He eats sharks for breakfast.”
Marcus didn’t smile. He opened a laptop, his fingers flying across the keys. “Ares Fernandez made a mistake. He assumed you were playing defense.”
“I can’t fight him,” I whispered, staring out the window at the blurring trees. “He has endless money. He has my mother.”
“He has money,” Graham corrected, his voice hardening into steel. “I have leverage. And you have the truth.”
Graham turned to me, his honey-brown eyes burning with an intensity that made my breath hitch. “We’re not just getting the lawsuit dismissed, Selene. We’re countersuing. Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress, Fraudulent Misrepresentation, and Intellectual Property Theft. We are going to drag the Fernandez name through the mud until he begs you to take your art back.”
“But the public...” I started.
“Let them talk,” Graham interrupted. He pulled out his phone and tapped the screen. “I just issued a press release from Henry Tech. We’re announcing a new partnership with an independent artist for our global rebranding campaign. You.”
He held up the phone. The headline flashed across the screen: *Tech Mogul Graham Henry Backs ‘The Real Artist’ in David vs. Goliath Legal Battle.*
“He wants a war?” Graham said softly, taking my cold hand in his. “Let’s give him one.”
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