For a long, suspended minute, Derek stood there barely breathing, trying to bend what he saw into a version where he was still in charge. His eyes fixed on the mug, the papers, the evidence bag—anything but the truth staring back at him: Olivia had planned this.
He grabbed the divorce packet. Page one was stark—names, wedding date, and under Reason: irreconcilable differences. No emotion. No drama. Just finality.
Page two listed temporary orders: Olivia’s exclusive use of the apartment until the lease ended, no contact outside attorneys, and a clear warning that Derek was not to remove property.
A sticky note rested on top, written in Olivia’s neat, unmistakable hand.
Derek—
Your mother used my card without permission. That wasn’t “family.” That was theft.
I froze the account she could access. My paycheck is now in my own account.
If you’re angry, be angry at the people who crossed boundaries and called it love.
Do not come to my work. Do not contact my sister. Communicate through my attorney.
—OliviaHeat rushed up Derek’s neck. His reflex screamed to call her—to accuse, to yell, to force the old routine back into place: Derek explodes, Olivia apologizes, Marjorie wins.
He tapped Olivia’s number.
Voicemail.
His phone buzzed again—his mother. He answered on instinct.Did you fix it?” Marjorie snapped. “I’m sitting in my car like a criminal!”
“What did you do?” Derek shot back. “Why were you in our apartment?”
“I told you,” she said, offended. “I needed groceries. She emptied the account to embarrass me.”Her eyes widened—like she’d never imagined her son choosing adulthood over her control.
Derek didn’t shout.
He didn’t need to.