I stood in the kitchen, turning the flowers in my hands, wondering how a twelve-year marriage could be reduced to dates, memories, and silence. Those years had been filled with ordinary moments—shared coffee, quiet jokes, school pickups—that only revealed their value after they were gone. Losing Victoria had already left a space I couldn’t fill, but I thought I understood what had happened. I was wrong.
The phone call came without warning. Thomas Garrison, the contractor renovating Victoria’s old office, sounded shaken. He told me to come immediately—and not alone. “Bring your boys,” he said, “and a lawyer if you can.” Something in his voice made my pulse spike. Within minutes, I had Leo and Sam in the car, driving through Portland in a silence that felt heavier than grief.
Victoria’s office had remained untouched since the night she died. She had co-owned the firm with Marcus Vance, handling accounts for small community groups—church funds, youth programs, people who trusted her completely. What I didn’t know was that money had gone missing, and Victoria had quietly begun replacing it from our own savings. She was trying to protect those people while building proof strong enough to expose the truth.
Marcus had discovered what she knew. Instead of facing it, he turned it into a threat—aimed not at her, but at our children. In that moment, everything shifted. My wife hadn’t just been a victim of circumstance. She had been protecting others, even at a cost I was only beginning to understand.