Addison Lawson POV:
The air in the study grew thick, heavy with unspoken questions. Detective Miller, now wearing a pair of latex gloves, carefully lifted the small, folded card from the jewelry box with a pair of tweezers.
He placed it on the polished surface of the desk and slowly unfolded it. Everyone leaned in, holding their breath.
It was a simple, elegant card, the kind Damien favored. And on it, in his familiar, sharp handwriting, was a single sentence. A sentence I had seen a thousand times on birthday cards, on notes left on my pillow, on the contracts that had built his empire.
Miller turned the card toward the officer's body camera, then read the words aloud. His voice, flat and professional, was a hammer shattering the last remnants of my seven-year marriage.
"To my future, Candace. The past is dead."
*The past is dead.*
The words sliced through me, not with the heat of a fresh wound, but with the chilling finality of a morgue slab. The ring was proof of his infidelity. This card was the obituary for my life, for our history, for everything I had believed in. He hadn't just moved on. He had erased me.
My body swayed, and I gripped the edge of the desk to steady myself. The room tilted, the faces of the officers blurring. I wouldn't cry. I wouldn't give him the satisfaction. The light in my eyes, the warmth I had carried for him, simply went out, leaving behind nothing but cold ash and a resolve as hard and unforgiving as granite.
Candace, however, misunderstood the meaning of the card entirely. A wild, triumphant look flashed across her face. "You see?" she shrieked at me, a crazed laugh bubbling in her throat. "You hear that? I'm his future! You're dead!"
Her victory lap lasted exactly three seconds.
Detective Miller turned his cold, unimpressed gaze on her. "Ms. Smith, this card, along with the ring, confirms that these items were a gift to you from Damien Travis. Which means your claim that they were stolen by Ms. Lawson is demonstrably false."
He let the silence hang for a beat, then delivered the final blow. "You're looking at a felony charge for filing a false police report and perjury."
The crazed smile froze on Candace's face. The blood drained from it, leaving a mask of pure horror. She finally understood. The card wasn't a love note. It was evidence. It was her conviction.
"No," she whispered, shaking her head in disbelief. "No, she stole it... she did..."
Miller ignored her frantic denials. He gestured to the two uniformed officers. "Candace Smith, you're under arrest."
They moved in, the metallic click of the handcuffs echoing in the silent room. That sound was the death knell of her ambitions, the end of her climb.
She collapsed, a screaming, sobbing mess, as they pulled her to her feet and led her out of the room. I watched her go, feeling nothing. It was like watching a stranger's drama unfold on a screen.
The evidence was bagged and tagged. As the team prepared to leave, Detective Miller approached me. "Ms. Lawson, on behalf of the department, I apologize for what you've been through. You're completely cleared."
"Thank you, Detective," I managed, my voice a raw whisper.
Just then, his phone rang. He answered, listened, and a strange expression crossed his face.
He hung up and looked at me. "That was the front desk at the precinct. Mr. Damien Travis just arrived. He heard Candace was brought in for questioning." He paused. "He's asking for you."
A blade of ice slid through my veins. Perfect.
We arrived back at the 17th Precinct just as a black Bentley glided to the curb. The door opened and Damien emerged, his dark suit impeccable, his expression a mask of controlled fury. He saw Candace being led in handcuffs and his face tightened.
Then his eyes found me.
He looked past his crying mistress, past the police officers, and his gaze locked with mine.
His eyes blazed with an anger born of inconvenience and exposure. Mine were as still and cold as a frozen lake. The storm had finally arrived.
Addison Lawson POV:
Damien stormed past the whimpering, handcuffed Candace as if she were a piece of furniture. His entire focus was on me, his face a thundercloud of rage. This wasn't the concern of a man worried for his wife; it was the fury of a king whose perfect kingdom had been disrupted.
He grabbed my arm, his fingers digging into my flesh. "Addison, have you lost your mind?" he hissed, his voice low and venomous. "Why would you do this? Why make it so public?"
His first words. Not "Are you okay?" Not "I'm sorry." But an accusation. An attack on me for exposing his mess.
I yanked my arm from his grasp. My strength was nothing compared to his, but the sheer disgust in my eyes made him recoil. For the first time, I looked at the man I had loved for seven years and felt like I was looking at a complete stranger.
"Public?" I laughed, a short, bitter sound that held no humor. "You think this is public? This is nothing compared to what you've done."
Heads were turning. People walking into the precinct were slowing down, their cell phones subtly rising. A high-profile lawyer, his mistress in cuffs, and his wife in a public confrontation—it was a scene made for social media.
Damien noticed the attention. His jaw tightened. "This isn't the place for this. Come with me. We'll talk." He tried to steer me toward his car.
I stood my ground, rooting my feet to the pavement. "No. I think this is the perfect place. Let everyone see how the great Damien Travis treats the wife he swore to protect."
His face went pale with fury. His reputation was everything. He lived and died by his public image.
"What do you want, Addison?" he snarled, his voice dropping to a desperate whisper. "Money? Is that it? I'll give you whatever you want, just stop this. This doesn't help either of us."
He still thought it was about money. He thought he could write a check and make the gaping wound of his betrayal disappear.
I looked directly into his eyes, and I dropped the bomb that would shatter his world. "I'm pregnant, Damien."
Every ounce of anger, every calculated thought, every shred of his composure evaporated. He froze, his eyes widening in stunned disbelief.
"What?" he breathed, the word barely audible.
The whispers around us grew louder. The onlookers, the police officers—they had all heard. A pregnant wife, a cheating husband. The drama had just escalated into a tragedy.
My hand went to my stomach, a gesture that was no longer secret but a public declaration. "When you wrote 'the past is dead,' you weren't just killing our marriage, Damien." My voice was quiet, but each word was a stake driven into his heart. "You were killing our family."
His mind was reeling. I could see it in his eyes. A baby. He was going to be a father. And his first reaction wasn't joy. It was pure, unadulterated panic. He wasn't thinking about our child; he was thinking about how this complication would ruin his life.
That single, selfish thought was the last nail in the coffin of my love for him. It was gone. All of it.
I took a step back, creating a chasm between us. My voice dropped so low only he could hear it, the words laced with the frost of a coming winter. "You think this is a victory? Getting Candace arrested?"
I shook my head slowly. "No, Damien."
"This is just the beginning."
The words hit him like a physical blow. He saw the promise in my eyes—not of reconciliation, but of war. For the first time, he looked at me and saw not a doormat, not a placeholder, but an enemy. And it terrified him.
The loss of control, the raw fear—it all boiled over into a primal, thoughtless rage. He wanted me to stop. He wanted the words to go away.
He lunged forward, his hand shoving hard against my shoulder.
"Shut up!" he roared.
He didn't think. He didn't consider that I was pregnant. He didn't see the police, the cameras, the dozens of witnesses. He just reacted, a cornered animal lashing out.