The Bracelet, The Monaco Ticket, And The Judge Who Finally Picked Up The Phone-olive

Jake Murphy’s name blinked on my monitor at 5:12 p.m.

I did not answer on the first ring.

Rebecca was still on the other line, breathing hard after I told Judge Walsh she had already destroyed her own life. Through my office window, the backyard looked almost normal. Connor’s baseball glove lay open in the grass. Madison’s purple scooter leaned against the fence. The sprinkler clicked once, then hissed against the April dirt.

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Normal things looked different when someone had just tried to steal them.

I ended the call with Judge Walsh and picked up Jake’s.

His voice came in flat and professional. “Tell me you didn’t send me half of this from a personal email.”

“I didn’t.”

“Good. Because your friend Ethan Morrison just turned his phone off, emptied two accounts, and bought a ticket out of O’Hare under his middle name.”

The office went still around me.

“What time?” I asked.

“Booked at 3:58 p.m. Departure 11:30 tonight. Paris first. Then Zurich connection if he makes it.”

I looked at the hotel stills spread across my desk. Rebecca’s bracelet glittered from one of the printed images, frozen mid-laugh.

Ethan had not waited for love, loyalty, or a final goodbye.

He had taken the money and run.

At 5:19 p.m., Rebecca called again. This time there was no threat in her voice. Only panic.

“Carter, Ethan is gone.”

I said nothing.

“He cleaned out the accounts. The business account. The development account. Even the emergency fund. He left me with nothing.” Her breath caught like she had been running. “Please. I made mistakes, but we can fix this.”

I stared at the manila envelope copy on my desk, the one Lawrence Sterling had not received. Every page had been duplicated, timestamped, and stored in three places.

“No, Rebecca,” I said. “You made choices.”

“He lied to me.”

“So did you.”

The line crackled. Somewhere behind her, a door slammed. I could picture the Walsh house: marble entryway, polished stair rail, Rebecca standing in designer clothes she had no way to protect anymore.

“I can testify against him,” she said quickly. “I can help you.”

“You will.”

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