The Second Recorder Was Still Running When Victoria’s Perfect Family Began To Break-Cherry

Daniel’s first words were not to me.

They were not to Lena.

They were not even to Victoria.

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He looked past all of us, toward the two security men standing in the hall, and said quietly, “No one touches my wife.”

Victoria’s hand stopped halfway toward Lena’s sleeve.

For one thin second, the mansion seemed to forget how to breathe.

Rain tapped against the bedroom windows. The tiny red light on Lena’s second recorder blinked once, twice, three times, catching every face in the room. My fingers were still locked around the first recorder. My phone lay facedown on the nightstand with that message burning inside it.

DON’T TRUST HIM WITH THE RECORDING.

Daniel did not look at the phone.

He kept his eyes on his mother.

Victoria’s smile returned slowly, but it did not reach her eyes.

“Daniel,” she said, almost tenderly, “you are embarrassing yourself.”

He gave a small nod, as if she had just confirmed something.

“No,” he said. “You are.”

The security men shifted behind her. One reached toward the inside of his jacket.

Daniel lifted his hand.

“Careful,” he said. “There are cameras in this hallway now.”

Victoria’s face changed so fast that I almost missed it. Not fear. Calculation.

“You installed cameras in my house?”

“My house,” Daniel said.

The words landed like a dropped glass.

Victoria’s fingers tightened on the chair back.

I looked at him, trying to understand which version of my husband was standing in front of me. The man who demanded the recorder. The man who had not looked surprised when Victoria mentioned money. The man now blocking his mother’s guards with one calm sentence.

Lena’s breathing came in broken little pulls.

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