He frowned and tried again, but the light remained red, indicating that his biometric data had been completely wiped from the system.
Farah peered over his shoulder, her voice dripping with annoyance. “What on earth have you done to the front door, Rachel?”
Aiden punched in the old security code with increasing frustration, but the lock remained engaged and silent.
From inside the living room, Rose made a small, soft sound, and I lifted her from the bassinet to walk toward the security monitor.
I could see Aiden’s face on the screen, flushed from the sun and twisted with impatient anger, while Farah stood beside him still wearing her ridiculous resort hat.
He rang the doorbell hard, the sound echoing through the house like a challenge.
I walked to the door and opened it, but I left the heavy security chain latched, limiting the opening to just a few inches.
For the very first time in our three years of marriage, Aiden looked genuinely uncertain and shaken as he looked at me through the gap.
“Open this door right now, Rachel,” he ordered, trying to revert to his usual commanding demeanor.
“No, I will not be doing that,” I said, my voice firm and clear.
Farah shoved forward, pushing her head toward the gap in the door. “You cannot do this to us, as this is my son’s house!”
I offered her a cold, thin smile. “No, Farah, you are both mistaken because it is mine.”
Aiden blinked, looking like a deer caught in the headlights.
“My father bought this home long before the wedding, and the deed is entirely in my name,” I continued, watching the color drain from his face.
“The mortgage is paid directly from my account, and you two were merely invited guests in my home,” I added.
His mouth opened to argue, but no coherent sound came out as he looked at the closed door.
My attorney stepped into view behind me, looking professional and entirely unbothered by the scene on the porch.
Aiden’s eyes darted from the lawyer to the two private security guards standing near the driveway, and finally to the baby in my arms.
“You actually had the baby?” he whispered, his voice cracking with a mix of confusion and belated realization.
“Yes, I did,” I said. “I did it while you were busy drinking cocktails on a beach, exactly as you requested.”
Farah’s face twisted into a mask of pure fury. “Don’t be so cruel, Rachel, just open the door and let us inside because we are family.”
I unlatched the chain, but I did not step aside to let them in; instead, I reached out and handed Aiden a thick, heavy envelope.
Inside were copies of the formal divorce filing, the emergency custody petition, the corporate audit report, and screenshots of every single message.
His tan seemed to evaporate as he scanned the documents, his hands trembling as he realized he had been caught in his own web of lies.
“You cannot do this to me,” he said, clutching the papers as if they were burning his skin.
“I already have,” I replied.
My attorney’s voice was calm and clinical. “Mr. Hale, your access to all company funds has been permanently revoked.”
He continued, “Your employer has been formally notified of the evidence regarding your expense fraud, and you and your mother are required to schedule a supervised pickup of your personal belongings.”
“You are not entering this property tonight, and any further attempt to do so will be handled by the authorities,” the lawyer finished.
Farah clutched Aiden’s arm, clearly desperate for him to salvage the situation. “Say something to her, Aiden!”
But Aiden was staring down at the page with his own words printed in bold black ink.
“Let her give birth by herself.”
His cruelty looked entirely different when it was no longer a private secret but a public record.
“You really froze everything?” he asked, sounding small and defeated.
“No,” I said, looking him directly in the eyes. “I simply protected what was never yours to begin with.”
A police cruiser rolled slowly to the curb behind them, its lights off, but its presence undeniable and absolute.
It was not dramatic, and it was not loud; it was just a firm, present reality that he could no longer escape or manipulate.