Then the trust administrator confirms that someone called last week pretending to be you, asking about sale procedures—but failed the security questions, so no information was released. A pending inquiry was noted, nothing more. The registry office, however, has a scanned title release request for the Volkswagen. Also fake. Also under review, not finalized.
Your daughter did not sell the assets.
She tried to.
And to do it, she pretended to be you.
You sit very still as that truth settles deep inside you.
A mother spends decades believing pain will come from the outside world—illness, accidents, strangers, time. You never imagine the blade will one day wear your child’s face.
Daniel gently asks whether you want law enforcement involved now or if you prefer to begin with formal notices freezing all activity and preserving records. You choose the second. Not because Ángela deserves protection, but because you need facts before war. Daniel agrees. By noon, certified notices are prepared. Fraud alerts are placed. A private investigator he occasionally uses is assigned to trace the supposed buyers.
Before you leave, Daniel hands you one more folder.
“Roberto asked me to give this to you only if things ever reached this point.”
Inside is another sealed envelope.
Your stomach drops.
There is always another room in grief, you think. Another hallway you didn’t know existed.
You wait until you are home to open it.
This second letter is shorter. More direct.
If Ángela betrays you in a serious way, there is something else you must know. Three years ago, Eduardo approached me privately for money. Not once. Repeatedly. He said he had business opportunities. Later I learned he had gambling debts. I paid one debt to keep loan sharks away from Ángela and the children they hoped to have. I told no one. When I refused to continue, his attitude changed. I caught him once in my study looking through our files. He claimed he was searching for a charger. I did not believe him.
Your heartbeat pounds in your ears.
I hired an accountant to quietly review whether any household information had been used improperly. Some small things were attempted, nothing completed. I changed passwords and moved documents. I did not tell you because I hoped I was being paranoid. But if you are now reading this, then my paranoia was wisdom wearing work clothes.
You let out a laugh at that, because it sounds exactly like Roberto—even now, slipping warmth into seriousness. Then the laughter breaks.
There it is.
The outline of it all.
Eduardo had debts.
Eduardo had motive.
Eduardo had access through Ángela.
And Ángela, whether from love, blindness, fear, or her own greed, had crossed a line most people spend their entire lives insisting they never would.
That evening, the investigator calls Daniel, and Daniel calls you.
The beach house was not sold. It had been shown to a potential buyer through an online listing created under a fake agency name. A deposit of twenty thousand dollars had been taken through an account linked not directly to Ángela, but to a shell company registered six months earlier. The buyer never received possession and had started asking questions.
The Volkswagen story is worse in a quieter way. Eduardo photographed it, listed it in a collector forum, and claimed he had authority to sell it as part of a family estate liquidation. A man from another state wired five thousand dollars as a “holding payment” before pickup.
Two lies.
Two victims.
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