My mother, Helena Ross, had once been a federal judge. By the time I got home, they were already working.
And when I returned to the house days later, everything had changed.
The locks. The ownership records. The narrative Adrian thought he controlled.

Inside, Celeste stood in my silk robe, admiring herself like she had won something permanent.
“You can leave,” she said sweetly. “There’s a small apartment downtown. Adrian paid for a month.”
I held my babies tighter. “You displaced newborns,” I said. Adrian didn’t even flinch. “You refused to cooperate.”
That’s when I understood the truth. This was never about love. It was about control.
What they didn’t know was that the house was never Adrian’s to give away. It belonged to my family trust.
And the signature on the transfer documents? Dated while I was unconscious after giving birth.
A legal nightmare. Or as my father put it: “Fraud.” From that moment on, everything moved fast.
Forensics. Bank trails. Hidden transfers. Forged signatures. Shell companies. A complete paper trail of deception Adrian thought would never be seen.
At court, he arrived smiling — until he saw my parents sitting beside me. That smile disappeared instantly.
Then came the evidence. Hospital recordings. Financial audits. Security footage. Illegal property transfer proof. The judge didn’t hesitate.
The house transfer was frozen. Custody was granted to me. Investigations were opened.
And for the first time, Adrian Vale realized he wasn’t the one in control anymore.
Weeks later, he was suspended from his company. Then indicted. Then gone from the life he thought he owned.
Six months later, I stood in a quiet nursery watching my sons sleep peacefully.
My mother handed me coffee.
My father adjusted a crooked frame on the wall.
“You’re smiling again,” he said.
I looked at my children.
And finally understood what freedom felt like. “No,” I said softly. “I’m finally free.”