My Police-Officer Ex Saw My Debt Exposed During A Livestream-eirian

The first time I became famous for yelling at a criminal, I was wearing only half my makeup.

That is not a metaphor.

One side of my face was blended, powdered, and ready to sell concealer to exhausted women with office jobs.

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The other side still looked like I had been assembled in poor lighting.

I was live, leaning toward the mirror, when my phone rang with an international number.

My viewers saw it before I could hide it.

That was the problem with building a career as a blunt beauty streamer.

People did not come only for lipstick.

They came because I used to say the things other influencers swallowed.

Lately my management company had been trying to polish me into someone softer, but my followers had no respect for growth.

“Answer it,” they spammed.

“If it’s a scammer, roast him.”

“Sister, I will buy everything in the cart if you answer.”

So I answered.

The man on the phone claimed to be from the police department.

He said a bank card in my name had been used in a suspicious fifty-million-dollar transaction and asked if I had authorized it.

I said yes.

He froze.

I told him I bought an elephant.

Then I added that I had hired ten male dancers to cheer the elephant up because emotional support was important.

The livestream went wild.

The fake officer tried to drag the call back to his script, but every time he asked a question, I gave him an answer that made less sense than the last.

By the end, he sounded exhausted enough to become an honest man.

I hung up feeling triumphant.

Then the phone rang again.

I answered without checking the number and said, “Grandma speaking. Which fraud department needs me now?”

The silence that followed was the kind that reaches through a phone and slaps you politely.

The second call was real.

The real anti-fraud unit had watched my little performance spread across the city network.

Officer Willis informed me that keeping a scammer entertained for thirty minutes while thousands of young viewers cheered was not a recommended public safety practice.

That evening, I took my phone, my shame, and my entire comment section to the Hillsboro Police Department for education.

I thought the worst part would be sitting through a lecture.

Then I saw Troy Song.

Troy stood near the records desk in a navy uniform, reading a file with the same serious brow I remembered from college.

Six years disappeared from the room.

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