The Envelope Wasn’t For His Mistress — It Was The Document That Could Ruin Me-yumihong

“Did he give her the envelope?” Linda asked.

I sat in my locked car with the engine off, my coat pulled tight around my ribs, and watched Evan through the windshield. He stood under Romano’s green awning with one hand pressed to his phone and the other pressed flat against the glass door, like he could hold the whole restaurant in place.

“Yes,” I said.

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Linda did not sigh. She did not curse. Her voice stayed low and clean.

“Then drive to the hotel. Do not go home. Do not answer him. Screenshot every call.”

My phone buzzed again before I could respond.

Evan.

Then again.

Evan.

Then a text appeared.

Claire, this looks worse than it is.

I took a screenshot. My thumb moved without rushing.

“What was in it?” I asked.

There was a pause on Linda’s end, just long enough for the cold in my car to crawl under my sleeves.

“I need to see whether he files anything tonight,” she said. “But based on the draft I found attached to the home equity documents, it may be a notarized transfer request. If she has it, he may be trying to move the debt trail away from himself.”

A bus hissed at the curb across the street. Someone laughed outside the restaurant, too loud and too normal. I looked at Evan again.

He had stopped calling.

Now he was typing.

Linda’s voice sharpened.

“Claire, listen carefully. The woman in red. Do you know her?”

“No.”

“Did she look like a date or a professional?”

I saw her hand on the wax seal. The way she did not flinch when Evan stood. The way she slipped the envelope into her purse without asking one question.

“Professional,” I said.

“Good. That means she can be named.”

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