Part Seven: The Reckoning
The grand jury indicted Henrique two weeks later.
Four counts of identity theft. Three counts of fraud. Two counts of forgery.
His bail was set at fifty thousand dollars, which his parents paid. Their disappointment evident in the brief glimpse Serena caught of them leaving the courthouse.
He was ordered to stay away from her. To surrender his passport. To check in weekly with his bail supervisor.
The trial was scheduled for eight weeks out.
Serena signed the lease on her Westbrook apartment the same day.
Moving day arrived with autumn colors painting the trees and a crisp edge to the air that promised winter.
True to his word, Masimo had arranged movers. Professionals who handled her few possessions with care.
The apartment was small but bright.
Windows that looked out over the park. Hardwood floors that creaked pleasantly under her feet.
It smelled like fresh paint and possibility.
“It’s perfect,” she told Elena, Masimo’s housekeeper, who had insisted on helping her unpack.
“Small. But mine.”
Elena smiled, her weathered hands folding Serena’s clothes with practiced efficiency.
“Mr. Bianke asked me to stock your kitchen. I hope you don’t mind. Basic supplies. Coffee. Bread. Some vegetables.”
Serena should have protested.
Should have insisted on doing it herself.
But the thought of coming home to a stocked kitchen—of not having to grocery shop on her first night—was too appealing.
“Thank you, Elena. That’s very kind.”
Elena paused in her folding.
Looking at Serena with eyes that had seen decades of Bianke family business.
“He’s a good man, Serena. Underneath all the rest. Don’t let the world tell you otherwise.”
“I know he is,” Serena said softly.
That night, alone in her new apartment for the first time, she painted watercolors.
Just like she used to.
Letting the colors bleed and blend on paper. Abstract landscapes that were more feeling than form.
It felt like coming home to herself.
The trial began on a gray October morning.
Serena sat in the witness box, her voice steady as she outlined Henrique’s systematic destruction of her financial life.
The prosecutor walked her through each piece of evidence. Each loan application. Each forged signature. The gambling transactions that proved his motive.
Henrique’s lawyer tried to shake her on cross-examination.
Suggesting she’d authorized the applications and was now lying to escape the debt.
But Serena didn’t waver.
The evidence was ironclad. The handwriting analysis unimpeachable.
The jury deliberated for less than four hours.
Guilty on all counts.
Henrique’s face crumpled as the verdict was read.
His mother sobbing in the gallery.
Serena felt nothing.
No satisfaction. No vindication.
Just a quiet relief that it was over.
The judge scheduled sentencing for the following month.
But the prosecutor told her to expect significant prison time. Five to ten years. Possibly more given the multiple counts and the escape risk.
Serena walked out of the courthouse into cold autumn sunlight.
Free in a way she hadn’t been in years.
Masimo was waiting by his car.
His expression carefully neutral until he saw her face.
Then he smiled. Genuine and warm.
“It’s over,” she told him.
“No, cara.”
He said it gently.
“It’s just beginning.”