Rising From Ashes: The Betrayed Wife's Return

Addison Lawson POV:

The fluorescent lights of the interrogation room hummed, a monotonous sound that vibrated in my teeth. Across the metal table, Candace Smith dabbed a silk handkerchief at her perfectly dry eyes.

"It was worth over two hundred thousand dollars," she said to Detective Miller, her voice trembling with practiced grief. "A family heirloom."

Detective Miller, a man whose tired eyes had seen every lie a person could tell, turned his gaze to me. His expression was professionally blank. "Ms. Lawson, you were found at the scene. Your fingerprints are on the door. You have anything to say?"

I ignored Candace's performative sniffle. I ignored the way the other officer in the corner was typing, each keystroke a nail in my coffin. I focused everything I had on the detective. My voice, when I spoke, was unnaturally calm.

"Detective," I said, my tone even. "Before you charge me, may I ask the 'victim' a few questions about the stolen item?"

Candace’s head snapped up. A flicker of panic crossed her face before she buried it under a fresh wave of indignation. "What tricks are you trying to pull?"

Miller’s brow furrowed. My composure was not the reaction of a common thief caught red-handed. It intrigued him. He gave a slight, almost imperceptible nod. "Go on."

I kept my eyes on him, but my questions were for her. "Ms. Smith, you said it was a diamond ring. Can you describe the band for the detective?"

She hesitated, her eyes darting around the room. "It was... it was white gold? Very shiny. Very expensive."

A small, cold smile touched my lips. I shook my head slightly, still looking at Miller. "It's platinum. PT950, to be exact. Not white gold." As a jewelry designer, the difference was as fundamental to me as the difference between black and white. It was my profession, my life's work.

I pressed on, my voice remaining soft, almost conversational. "And the cut of the main stone?"

"It was... round? I don't know all those technical terms!" Candace snapped, her composure starting to fray.

"It's a cushion cut," I corrected her gently. "Not round. And it's flanked by twelve pavé diamonds, one for each month of the year."

Detective Miller’s expression had shifted from bored skepticism to sharp attention. He picked up his pen and began to write in his notepad. The officer in the corner had stopped typing and was now watching me, his fingers hovering over the keyboard.

"Of course you know the details!" Candace shrieked, jumping to her feet. "You're the one who stole it!"

I let her accusation hang in the sterile air for a moment before I delivered the final blow. My voice didn't rise, but the question landed like a bomb in the silent room. "Then tell the detective what's engraved on the inside of the band."

Dead silence.

The color drained from Candace's face. Her perfectly painted lips parted, but no sound came out. She couldn't know. Damien had given it to her as a shiny bauble, a trophy. He would never have mentioned its history. She only ever cared about the carats.

Detective Miller's gaze was now as sharp as a scalpel, pinning Candace to her chair. "Ms. Smith?"

I broke the suffocating silence. My words were clear, precise, and devoid of emotion. Each one was a verdict. "It's engraved with 'D & A 7th Anniversary'."

I paused, letting the weight of it settle in the room. "D for Damien. A for Addison. It was a gift for our seventh wedding anniversary."

The two officers stared at me. The case had just imploded, transforming from a simple burglary into a messy, public domestic dispute. The entire narrative had flipped on its head.

Miller's internal scale of justice tipped, hard. He looked at me, his tone now respectful. "You're certain the ring is in her apartment?"

I nodded. My hand rested on my stomach, a secret gesture of protection for the only thing that mattered now. "I'm certain. Damien has a habit of hiding valuable things he doesn't want found easily. Check his study. Third drawer of the desk. There's a copy of the Harvard Law Review. It's inside."

The detail was too specific, too intimate to be a lie.

Miller stood up, his chair scraping against the linoleum. He looked at his colleague. "Get a search warrant."

The words "search warrant" shattered Candace’s last shred of composure. She leaped up, her voice a hysterical scream. "No! You can't do that! That's an invasion of my privacy!"

Her violent opposition was the most damning confession of all.

I watched her, a queen of hysterics on a crumbling throne. I felt no victory, only the cold, hollowed-out landscape of my heart. For the child growing inside me, I had to win. This was only the beginning.

Miller was unmoved. "Ms. Smith," he said, his voice cold iron. "If you obstruct this investigation, I'll add that to the charges."

Desperation clawed at her face. She fumbled in her designer handbag, her hands shaking uncontrollably as she pulled out her phone.

She stabbed a number into her phone, her thumb shaking. The call connected.

"Damien, save me!"

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