He Said Christmas Money Was Tight—Then His Brother Saw The Hotel Receipts-felicia

My thumb stayed above the folder marked EVIDENCE while Paige stood on the other side of my chained door, pale and breathing through his mouth like he had run up ten flights instead of three.

Trevor was still looking at him.

The hallway smelled like wet wool, old radiator heat, and someone’s burnt toast from the apartment downstairs. A baby cried behind a closed door somewhere below us. Paige’s expensive coat had a damp shine on the shoulders, and Trevor’s knuckles were red from the cold.

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“Tell him,” I said.

Paige swallowed. His eyes jumped from my phone to my face.

“Iris, don’t do this in front of him.”

That was the first honest thing he had said all week. Not don’t lie. Not don’t hurt me. Don’t do this in front of him.

Trevor’s voice dropped.

“Do what?”

I unlocked my phone. My hands were steady now. Too steady. The kind of steady that comes after every softer part of you has already packed itself into boxes.

The first screenshot opened bright against the dim hallway.

November 18th. 11:42 p.m.

Ava: “I can still smell your cologne on my pillow.”

Paige: “Worth the risk.”

Trevor blinked once. Paige reached toward the door like he could push the image back into my apartment.

“Stop,” he said.

I swiped.

November 23rd. Hotel confirmation. $417.96.

December 4th. Dinner reservation for two at the restaurant he told me was too expensive for our anniversary.

December 10th. A message from another woman whose name was not Ava.

Trevor did not move, but his face changed in layers. Confusion first. Then disgust. Then a tight, embarrassed pity that landed somewhere near me but never touched me.

“Jesus,” he said.

Paige’s voice cracked.

“She took everything out of context.”

I looked at him through the narrow gap.

“You booked a hotel out of context?”

The words hung there with the dry heat, the crying baby, the hallway light buzzing overhead.

Trevor turned on him.

“You told Mom she had some kind of breakdown.”

Paige flinched.

My fingers tightened around the phone.

There it was.

Not remorse.

Damage control.

At 7:16 that morning, before coming to my building, he had already started building a version of me that would make him the victim. Emotional. Unstable. Confused. Maybe vindictive. Maybe cruel.

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