
My Husband Planned to Steal Everything with My Stepsister
Chapter 3
The file came through at 2:14 AM.
I was still awake. I'd been awake for most of the week, not from grief — that phase had passed — but from the particular alertness that comes when a case is close to breaking. I'd been tracking Julian's location data for eleven days, cross-referencing his late-night patterns against Callen's social calendar, and the picture that emerged was one I hadn't fully anticipated.
The venue was called Meridian. It operated behind a members-only front — a cocktail lounge in Belltown with a discreet back entrance and a client list that read like a who's-who of Seattle's professional class. Derek had flagged it in a secondary data pull, a recurring charge on a card Julian kept separate from our joint accounts. I'd asked Derek to go deeper. What he sent me at 2:14 AM was a summary document, and I read it twice before I set my phone face-down on the desk.
The women at Meridian were young. Most of them were in arrangements they hadn't fully understood when they entered them. The contracts were structured to make exit difficult — financial penalties, NDAs with teeth, social pressure applied through the network Callen had spent years cultivating. It was the kind of operation that survived because the men who used it were the same men who sat on city boards and wrote checks to charities.
Julian had been a regular for at least fourteen months.
I sat with that for a long time. The city was quiet outside the window. Somewhere below, a car moved through the wet street, its headlights sweeping briefly across the ceiling. I watched the light pass and thought about the version of Julian I had married — the man who remembered how I took my coffee, who drove four hours to be at my father's hospital bedside when I couldn't get there in time, who once spent an entire Sunday helping me reorganize my case files because I was too exhausted to do it alone.
I thought about all of it carefully, the way I would examine a piece of evidence I was about to release. Turning it over. Checking it from every angle. Making sure I hadn't missed anything.
I hadn't missed anything. That man had never existed. He was a performance, and I had been the audience.
In the morning, I opened Project Clean Slate and added the Meridian documentation to the archive. Then I opened the working notes file I kept at the back of the folder — a running list of operational parameters I updated as the plan evolved. I found the line I was looking for and deleted it.
The word mercy disappeared from the document without a trace.
I made coffee and got to work.
Luminary Health Ventures took me nine days to build.
I'd done enough forensic work on financial fraud cases to know exactly what a legitimate early-stage wellness startup looked like from the outside — and more importantly, what a desperate investor performing cursory due diligence would accept as proof of legitimacy. I registered the shell company in Delaware on a Tuesday, using a registered agent service that asked no questions. The website went live on Thursday: clean sans-serif typography, soft sage and cream color palette, stock photography of women in well-lit spaces looking purposeful. The kind of site that communicated money without screaming it.
The advisory board was the detail I enjoyed most. I pulled names from the periphery of Seattle's wellness and biotech circles — people real enough to appear in LinkedIn searches, obscure enough that no one would actually call them. I wrote their bios with the specific texture of authenticity: one had a gap year in her timeline, another had a slightly inconsistent publication record. Real fabrications have small imperfections. Perfect ones get questioned.
The market projections I built from actual industry data, then adjusted the numbers upward by exactly the margin a founder with genuine enthusiasm but limited financial discipline might inflate them. Not fraudulent enough to trigger immediate skepticism. Just optimistic enough to be appealing to someone who needed to believe.
I printed the pitch deck on a Friday morning, the day before Lilian was scheduled to visit.
I left it in my home office, angled beneath a stack of case files so that roughly a third of the cover page was visible. Luminary Health Ventures. Seed Round. Q3 Projections. I positioned it the way I would position evidence at a scene — not planted, exactly. Discovered. There's a difference, and it matters.
The mutual acquaintance was easier. I mentioned Luminary to Dana Reeves at a coffee meeting I'd already had scheduled — Dana was the kind of person who processed information by sharing it, and she moved in the same professional circles as Julian. I described the venture as something I was considering but wasn't sure I had bandwidth for. I used the phrase 'the margins are genuinely interesting' and then changed the subject. That was enough.
Lilian came on Saturday. She moved through the penthouse the way she always did now — with a comfort that had grown incrementally over the past weeks, each visit a small territorial expansion. I watched her pause in the hallway outside my office, her eyes moving to the desk through the open door. I was in the kitchen, my back partially turned, giving her the angle she needed.
She didn't go in. She was too careful for that. But she saw it.
I knew she saw it because her voice, when she came to find me in the kitchen, had a new quality — a brightness that was slightly too even, the vocal equivalent of someone keeping their expression neutral while their mind was already running calculations.
We had tea. We talked about nothing. She left after an hour.
Five days later, Julian brought it up at dinner.
'I heard you're looking at a new venture,' he said, his tone easy, conversational. He was cutting his steak with the focused attention of a man pretending not to care about the answer.
'Where'd you hear that?' I asked.
'Dana mentioned something. Wellness startup?' He glanced up. 'Luminary something?'
'Luminary Health Ventures.' I set down my fork and gave him a slightly tired smile. 'It's a side project. I've been consulting with some people in the preventive health space. The numbers are interesting but I don't know if I have the time right now. With everything going on.' I touched my temple lightly — a callback to the accident, the lingering headaches, the performance of fragility I'd been maintaining for weeks.
His eyes moved across my face. I watched him process it — the hesitation, the exhaustion, the suggestion of something valuable that I might be too distracted to pursue properly.
'You should take care of yourself first,' he said. 'Don't overextend.'
'You're right,' I agreed, and picked up my fork again.
Under the table, my hands were perfectly still.
The trap was open. All I had to do now was wait for him to walk in.
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