The Wife I Left To Protect Came Home To A Stranger’s Ring—But The Ultrasound On The Fridge Told A Different Story – Part 4

Chapter Four: The Pattern Of Predators

David Okonowo’s office looked like a war room.

Documents covered every surface. The whiteboard was filled with names and dates and dollar amounts connected by colored lines. Three computer monitors displayed bank statements, property records, and legal filings.

Randall sat in the leather chair across from David’s desk.

Beside him sat Maya.

She’d shown up that morning in a black pantsuit and heels that could kill. Her hair was pulled back. Her eyes were sharp. She’d brought a leather folder stuffed with notes and a coffee that had gone cold two hours ago.

Sarah Vasquez sat at the conference table.

Forty-five. Gray ponytail. Reading glasses on a chain. She’d been tracing Jesse Morrison’s financial transactions for three weeks.

“This is what we’ve got.”

Sarah pulled up a flowchart on the main monitor.

“Jesse Morrison has been involved in twenty-three divorce cases over the past six years. In nineteen of those cases, he represented the wife. In seventeen cases, Morrison Property Valuation Services conducted the appraisal. In fourteen cases, the property was appraised at least thirty percent above market value.”

She clicked to the next slide.

“In twelve cases, Morrison began a romantic relationship with his client during or immediately after the divorce proceedings. In nine cases, the ex-husband was forced to buy out the wife at the inflated appraisal. And in seven cases, the property was later sold—usually within eighteen months—to a buyer connected to Morrison’s network at prices close to actual market value.”

David whistled low.

“So he inflates the appraisal. The ex-husband pays a premium to keep the house. The wife gets a windfall. Morrison moves in with the wife. Then, when the wife sells the property—usually because Morrison has convinced her to upgrade to something bigger—Morrison’s shell company buys it at a discount.”

“Exactly.”

Sarah clicked again.

“But here’s where it gets criminal. In three cases, including Randall’s, the ex-husband continued making automatic payments on mortgages that had been paid off. Total amount stolen across all three cases: one hundred thirty-seven thousand dollars.”

Maya leaned forward.

“And Annie knew?”

“She knew the mortgage was paid off. Jesse told her. But she claims she didn’t know the automatic payments would keep coming. She claims she thought the account was some kind of escrow.”

“Do you believe her?”

Sarah shrugged.

“It doesn’t matter what I believe. What matters is what the bank records show. The account was converted from a mortgage account to a personal checking account in Annie’s name alone. Any reasonable person would have questioned why payments were still being deposited. Any honest person would have notified the bank and returned the money.”

She pulled off her glasses.

“Annie didn’t do that. For two years, she accepted forty-three thousand dollars of her ex-husband’s money without telling him the mortgage was gone. That’s fraud.”

Randall stared at the flowchart.

All those names. All those families. All those lives destroyed by one man’s greed.

“What happens now?”

David leaned back in his chair.

“Now we file the expanded complaint. We include all twenty-three cases. We include the forensic accounting. We include the email metadata from Randall’s friend Hassan showing the divorce notifications were backdated. And we ask the court to refer the matter for criminal prosecution.”

He looked at Maya.

“Your witness testimony about Randall’s character—about the man he was before Dubai—matters. But also your expertise as a surgeon. You’re credible. You’re respected. The jury will listen to you.”

Maya nodded slowly.

“I’ll testify.”

“Good.”

David pulled a stack of papers toward him.

“One more thing. The state bar is fast-tracking Jesse’s disciplinary hearing. They’ve received complaints from twelve different clients now. They’re talking about emergency suspension.”

“When?”

“Next week.”

Randall felt something shift in his chest.

Not relief. Not yet.

But momentum.

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