They Laughed After Stealing My $113,000 — Until the Court Learned There Was Never Any Baby-QuynhTranJP

My thumb hovered above the screen for less than a second.

Then I pressed call.

Ellis straightened off the wall. Delaney’s knees uncrossed. The apartment’s stale heat seemed to thicken around us, pressing citrus cleaner, old fryer grease, and sun-baked carpet into the back of my throat. From somewhere upstairs came the short bark of a dog. The television next door kept talking through the wall, one cheerful game-show voice after another, as if nothing inside that room had split open.

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“Who are you calling?” Ellis asked.

Not loud. Not panicked. Still trying to wear his smirk.

I looked at him, then at Delaney on the couch with her hand gripping the faded sweatshirt at her hip.

“The police.”

Delaney’s mouth opened first.

“Rowan, don’t be insane.”

The dispatcher answered before either of them could move.

I gave the address. My full name. The number.

“One hundred thirteen thousand dollars,” I said. “Transferred without permission over the weekend. The recipients are standing in front of me.”

Ellis came off the wall then, quick enough for the orange soda to slosh against the lip of the bottle.

“Hang up.”

I stepped back toward the door and kept my voice level.

“No.”

Delaney stood too, all softness gone from her face.

“We were going to talk to you.”

I let that sit in the room for a beat.

“You already did,” I said. “At Lake Powell. On the trail. On my laptop.”

A little flash passed between them. Not guilt. Calculation.

The dispatcher asked if I was safe. I said yes. Ellis heard that and laughed once through his nose.

“You’re doing this over money?”

My hand tightened around the phone until the edge pressed a clean line into my palm. Over money. Over years of early mornings, skipped trips, cheap shoes, packed lunches, and the old Toyota with the dent in the bumper. Over a life built carefully enough that one broken thing would not crush the rest.

“Yes,” I said. “Over mine.”

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