The night after I texted Brandon, I barely slept.
Every time I closed my eyes, I heard Mercer’s voice again. He can’t know. I replayed the sound of the monitor spiking, the way my heart had tried to escape my chest while my body stayed frozen. I lay next to Nicole in the dark, listening to her breathing, steady and calm, and wondered how long she’d been able to sleep beside me while keeping secrets big enough to destroy everything.
She woke before I did and kissed my cheek softly.
“How are you feeling?” she asked.
“Fine,” I said. “Sore. Tired.”
She nodded, already distracted, already moving on.
I watched her leave the room and felt something inside me harden into resolve. Whatever was in that envelope, whatever she and Mercer thought I couldn’t know, I was done being the last person in my own life to find out the truth.
Brandon picked me up later that morning in his battered Tacoma, the one he refused to replace because, as he put it, “It’s paid for and it doesn’t ask questions.” He didn’t say much on the drive to his office. He didn’t need to. The look on my face told him this wasn’t about an affair or a midlife crisis.
This was about survival.
His office smelled like burnt coffee and old paper. The same dented filing cabinets lined the walls, the same framed photo of him in his Army CID uniform sat crooked on the shelf. He closed the door, sat across from me, and listened without interrupting as I told him everything.
The hernia. Nicole’s insistence. Mercer. The envelope. The look on her face.
When I finished, Brandon leaned back and exhaled slowly.
“That wasn’t nothing,” he said. “And that wasn’t innocent.”
“What was in the envelope?” I asked.
“I don’t know yet,” he said. “But I’m going to find out.”
He slid a yellow legal pad between us.
“If we do this, we do it clean. You don’t confront her. You don’t tip her off. You act normal. You let me dig.”
I nodded. “Do whatever you need to do.”
“Then you need to be ready,” Brandon said quietly. “Because if your gut is right, this isn’t just cheating.”
I went home that night and played my role.
I laughed when Nicole laughed. I thanked her for dinner. I asked about her day. I held her hand on the couch while she scrolled on her phone, face down, like always.
Inside, I was unraveling.
Two days later, Brandon called.
“Come in,” he said. “Now.”
The tone of his voice told me everything.
I sat across from him as he spread folders across his desk, one after another, like pieces of a puzzle that didn’t want to be solved.
“Julian Mercer,” Brandon said, tapping the first file. “Phoenix General Hospital. Early 2000s. Rising star. Then a quiet resignation after an ethics violation.”
He slid a page toward me.
“Sleeping with a patient’s spouse. Hospital buried it.”
My stomach turned.
“That’s not all,” Brandon continued, pulling out bank records. “He owns a penthouse at the Four Seasons. Nearly a million dollars. Paid in cash-heavy chunks over years.”
“Where did the money come from?” I asked.
Brandon met my eyes. “Your money.”
He laid out another document. “2019. Your life insurance jumps to $4.2 million. Same year Mercer relocates to Denver. Same year structured cash deposits start hitting his accounts.”
My head swam.
“That doesn’t prove Nicole—”
Brandon didn’t let me finish. He placed surveillance photos on the desk.
Nicole entering the Four Seasons.
Nicole using a keycard.
Nicole leaving hours later.
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