Part Five: The Unraveling
What happened over the following weeks was not dramatic in the way that television prepares you for. There was no single confrontation, no climactic scene. It was more like watching a building that has had its foundation removed: nothing seems to happen for a moment, and then everything happens at once.
The financial investigation moved quickly, partly because the evidence was so thoroughly documented and partly because Daniel, faced with the scope of what Martin’s team had assembled, made the mistake of trying to negotiate without first understanding his position. His initial lawyer — a friend of the family, not a specialist — withdrew after the first discovery filing. The second lawyer was better, but there was not much better could do with what the documentation showed.
The house had been purchased with funds from my mother’s estate, structured through an entity that predated my marriage. The cars — both of them — had been paid for from accounts that were, on close examination, mine. The business investments, the watches, the Macau payments: all traceable, all recoverable.
The social image collapsed first, actually. Someone — I never found out who, and I did not try — forwarded the social media posts from the night of my son’s birth to a mutual friend’s group chat. The juxtaposition was noticed: the celebratory hotpot photos timestamped at 7 PM, the new-father announcement Daniel had posted at 11 PM once the situation had changed and he understood the optics, the absence of any photograph of me or of my son in Daniel’s arms in that first golden hour. People are perceptive about these gaps. The comments section of his announcement post was deleted within a day, which only drew more attention.
Elaine stopped attending her Tuesday lunch group. Melissa, who had built a modest lifestyle-adjacent presence online, went quiet for several weeks and then returned with a slightly different tone — warmer, more careful, conspicuously silent on the subject of family.
I did not follow any of this closely. I had other things to attend to.