
My Husband Planned to Steal Everything with My Stepsister
Chapter 4
The money moved on a Wednesday.
I was in the middle of a case review when my phone buzzed — a silent alert from the account I'd set up for Luminary Health Ventures. I glanced at the screen under the conference table. $340,000. Transferred in full from Julian's firm operating account.
I set the phone face-down and finished my meeting.
Later, alone in my car in the parking garage, I sat with the notification for a long moment. Three hundred and forty thousand dollars. That was everything he had left. I knew his books better than he did — I'd been tracking his accounts for weeks, watching the gambling debts compound, watching the cash reserves drain. He'd been holding onto that operating capital like a life raft. And Lilian had convinced him to let go of it.
I thought about her, sitting across from him somewhere, spreading the Luminary pitch deck across a table, her voice soft and certain. *This is the one, Julian. This is how we get out from under it.* I could picture the exact tilt of her head, the way she'd touch his arm. She would have believed she was being useful. She would have felt, for once, like the smart one in the room.
I started the car and drove home.
The funds were already in motion, routed through two intermediary accounts before settling somewhere Julian would never find them. I updated Project Clean Slate, added the transfer confirmation, and closed the laptop.
Then I made dinner and waited for whatever came next.
I didn't have to wait long.
Four days after the transfer, Julian came home at 6 PM — early, which was unusual. He was wearing the expression I'd come to recognize as his controlled-panic face: jaw set, eyes slightly too still, the careful blankness of a man holding something together by force of will.
He kissed my cheek. Asked about my day. Ate half his dinner.
I watched him from across the table and said nothing.
That night, after he thought I was asleep, he made three calls. I had the audio the next morning. The first two were to Callen — short, clipped, the kind of calls where both people are too angry to be careful. The third was longer. A man's voice I didn't recognize, flat and unhurried, the way people sound when they've delivered bad news so many times it no longer requires inflection.
*Thirty days, Mr. Fox. We've been patient. Thirty days.*
Victor Hale's people, then. I'd been expecting them.
I added the recordings to the archive and went back to sleep.
Two days later, Kelsey called me while I was at the lab.
'Something's happening,' she said. 'Callen was at Julian's office this afternoon. My contact in the building saw them. Said it looked like a fight.'
'It was,' I said. 'I have the audio.'
A pause. 'Of course you do.' I could hear her exhale. 'How bad?'
'Bad enough that Callen proposed something.' I kept my voice even. 'I'll send you the file tonight. I need you to read it and tell me if you think they'll actually go through with it.'
She called me back at 10 PM. 'They're going to do it,' she said. Her voice was steady, but I knew her well enough to hear what was underneath it. 'Milana. A kidnapping. That's—'
'Felony extortion,' I said. 'Yes.'
'You're going to let it happen.'
'I'm going to let them believe it's happening.' I moved to the window, looking out at the city. 'There's a difference.'
Another silence. Then: 'Okay. What do you need from me?'
'Not yet,' I said. 'Your part comes later. Right now I just need you to know.'
The planning meeting happened three days after that. Julian's apartment, 8 PM. I knew because I was listening.
Callen's voice was the one that did most of the talking. He had the easy confidence of a man who had never personally faced consequences for anything, which made him careless with details in a way that was almost generous. He laid out the structure like he was pitching a business plan: Lilian would disappear for forty-eight hours, staying at a hotel under a false name. The calls to me would be made from a burner. The ransom demand — five hundred thousand, non-negotiable — would come with a photo of Lilian looking frightened, which Callen seemed to think would be the convincing detail.
Julian's hesitation was audible. A long pause before he spoke. 'This is a felony.'
'So is fraud,' Callen said. 'You've been doing that for months.'
'That's different.'
'It really isn't.'
Then Lilian's voice, softer than both of theirs, with that particular quality she used when she wanted something — the slight upward lift, the careful vulnerability. 'Julian. We don't have another option. Victor's people aren't going to wait. And Milana has the money. She has more than enough. She won't even feel it.'
I stood in my kitchen, phone pressed to my ear, and listened to my stepsister explain why stealing from me was reasonable.
'She'll pay,' Lilian continued. 'You know she will. She's not going to risk my safety. Whatever else is going on between you two, she's not going to let something happen to me.'
The confidence in her voice was something I would think about later. The absolute certainty that she knew how I would respond. That she had me mapped, predicted, contained.
Julian agreed. I heard it in the shift of his breathing before he even said the word.
'Fine,' he said. 'We do it your way.'
I set my phone down on the counter. The kitchen was very quiet. Outside, rain had started against the windows, soft and steady.
I thought about the word mercy again — the one I'd deleted from my working notes weeks ago. I thought about the man who had driven four hours to sit beside me at my father's hospital bedside. I thought about how long I had carried that memory like it meant something.
Then I opened Project Clean Slate, created a new subfolder, and labeled it *Extortion — Evidence Archive.*
I had thirty days before Victor Hale's deadline. Julian had just handed me everything I needed to make sure he never paid it.
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