Instead, there was a lease agreement for a luxury penthouse in Miami Beach.
Two names were listed on the contract:
Daniel Carter.
Olivia Bennett.
There were emails discussing their future together.
Emails about finally being free.
Emails about starting a new life.
And attached to one of them was an ultrasound image.
Olivia was pregnant.
Meanwhile, Daniel had been secretly draining money from our joint account for months.
Not a few thousand dollars.
Hundreds of thousands.
The account held $720,000.
My inheritance.
Money left by my parents.
Money I had carefully invested and protected long before Daniel entered my life.
Money I had trusted him with because I believed marriage meant building a future together.
That night, something inside me broke.
Not my heart.
My illusion.
The next morning, I drove Daniel to the airport.
I cried.
I hugged him.
I watched him walk away.
Then, once he disappeared through security, I went home.
And got to work.
I logged into our joint account.
Years earlier, my financial adviser had convinced me to keep a separate account in my own name.
Just in case.
That decision saved me.
Within minutes, I transferred every dollar.
The balance dropped to zero.
Then I called my attorney.
“File for divorce,” I said.
“And send the paperwork to Miami, not London.”
Two hours later, Daniel called.
His credit card had been declined.
His voice was shaking.
“What happened to the money?”
“I moved it,” I said.
“That’s our money!”
“No,” I replied. “It’s my inheritance.”
Silence.
Then panic.
Then excuses.
Then apologies.
I told him I knew everything.
The penthouse.
Olivia.
The baby.
The lies.
“You’re my home,” he said desperately.
I almost laughed.
That line had once worked.
“Get a job,” I told him. “You seem talented at creating stories.”
Then I hung up.
The following months were strangely peaceful.