Monroe looked at my cheek.
His jaw tightened. “We should arrest him now.”
“No,” I said, sliding croissants into a basket. “He likes an audience.”
Chief Bell studied me for a long moment. “You’re sure?”
I poured coffee into four cups.
“For three years,” I said, “he taught me exactly how he likes to be humiliated.”
Part 3
At 7:03 a.m., Victor came downstairs whistling.
He wore the freshly ironed shirt.
Perfect sleeves. Perfect collar. Perfect fraud.
“Good to see you’ve finally come to your senses,” he laughed, walking into the dining room.
Then his briefcase hit the floor.
Chief Adrienne Bell sat at the table, spreading butter over a croissant with surgical calm. Detective Monroe reviewed footage on a tablet. Detective Patel took notes beside a steaming cup of coffee.
Victor’s face emptied.
Lydia, stepping in behind him in yesterday’s dress, froze at the threshold.
The room went silent except for the soft crackle of pastry beneath Bell’s knife.
“Elena,” Victor said carefully, “what is this?”
I sat at the far end of the table.
“Breakfast.”
Chief Bell turned the tablet toward him.
On the screen, Victor’s hand struck my face again and again in clean, unforgiving pixels.
Look what you made me do.
His mouth opened. Closed.
Lydia stepped backward. “Victor, what did you do?”
He spun toward her. “Shut up.”
Monroe looked up. “That would be unwise.”
Victor straightened, trying to rebuild himself from arrogance. “Chief, this is a marital misunderstanding. My wife is emotional. She has always been unstable.”
I smiled.
He hated that more than silence.
Bell tapped the screen. Another video played.
Victor and Lydia in my kitchen.
The police union check clears Friday.
The complaint file disappears.
Captain Rusk owes me.
Lydia’s hand flew to her mouth.
Victor’s eyes darted from Bell to the detectives, searching for weakness and finding none.
“You recorded private conversations in my home,” he said.
“Our home,” I corrected. “And my attorney confirmed consent laws before I installed anything in shared spaces.”
His face reddened. “You planned this.”
“No,” I said. “You planned this. I documented it.”
Patel placed a folder on the table. “Mr. Vale, we also have financial records, witness statements, and a signed affidavit from the dispatch employee you believed had been paid off.”
Victor staggered half a step.
That name had landed like a knife.
Bell wiped her fingers on a napkin and stood. “Victor Vale, you are being taken in for questioning regarding domestic assault, obstruction, bribery, intimidation of witnesses, and conspiracy to interfere with an internal investigation.”
Lydia began crying. “He told me it was handled.”Stress relief products
Victor pointed at me. “You think this makes you powerful? You’re nothing without my name.”
I rose slowly.