In the morning, my husband texted me: “Don’t go to the airport. I’m taking my secretary to the Maldives instead. She deserves this vacation more than you.” The next day I called a realtor, sold our penthouse for cash, and left the country. When they came back bronzed and happy, the house…

“There is no upstairs to call,” Leon said. “Unit 34B changed ownership nine days ago.”

Silence.

The kind that doesn’t register immediately, because arrogance needs a moment to process reality.

Adrian stared.

“What?”

Leon slid an envelope across the desk.

It had Adrian’s name written on the front in my handwriting.

He tore it open right there in the lobby.

Inside were three items.

A copy of the closing statement.

A cashier’s receipt for the sale.

And a note.

Since your secretary deserved the vacation more than I did, I assumed the buyer deserved the penthouse more than you did.

According to Leon, Sabrina stepped away from Adrian the moment she read over his shoulder.

Not out of sympathy.

Out of self-preservation.

Because suddenly, the man she had flown to the Maldives with no longer looked powerful.

He looked reckless.

And women like Sabrina can tolerate infidelity, vanity, even cruelty.

But instability?

Never.

Adrian demanded proof.

Leon provided the recorded deed transfer summary.

Adrian demanded legal review.

Leon handed him my attorney’s card.

Adrian demanded access to “collect his property.”

Leon informed him that the apartment contents had been included in the sale, except for the personal items I had lawfully removed and the boxed clothing waiting in storage under his own name.

Apparently, that was when he started shouting.

The lobby cameras captured every second.

Sabrina stood beside the luggage with her arms crossed, her expression shifting from confusion to anger to calculation. By the time Adrian finished his rant, she had already understood what I had intended her to see.

He wasn’t returning to luxury.

He was returning to consequences.