“Bradley, we are in freefall,” the CFO’s voice crackled, laced with sheer terror. “Our three biggest corporate partners just pulled their accounts. They terminated the contracts.”
Bradley’s vision blurred. “What? Why? That’s a million-dollar penalty fee!”
“I don’t know! They said they received an anonymous drop of internal financial documents. Bradley… the company is bleeding out. You need to get here now.”
Bradley slowly lowered the phone, his world fracturing into a million jagged pieces. He looked at the crying woman on the bed, the shocked faces of his family, and realized the nightmare had only just begun.
And somewhere, deeply buried in his phone, a new email notification quietly pinged: Notice of Immediate Asset Freeze.
While the walls of Bradley’s life were caving in, I was thirty thousand feet in the air, soaring above a sea of endless, blindingly white clouds.
The first-class cabin was a sanctuary of hushed whispers and soft lighting. Connor was fast asleep, his small head resting heavily against my shoulder, his breathing even and peaceful. Madison had her nose pressed against the thick glass of the window, memorized by the vast expanse of the sky.
“Mommy?” Madison murmured softly, not looking away from the clouds. “Are we ever going back to the loud house?”
I gently stroked the soft hair at the nape of her neck. “No, sweetheart. We’re going to a new house. A quiet one. With a big garden just for you and your brother.”
She smiled, a genuine, relaxed expression I hadn’t seen on her face in months. “Good. I didn’t like how Daddy yelled.”
Her innocent words were a dagger, but also a vindication. I leaned my head back against the leather seat and closed my eyes. For the first time in an eternity, the knot of anxiety that had lived in my stomach was gone. Freedom tasted like the recycled air of an airplane cabin, and it was the sweetest thing I had ever consumed.
Back on the ground, the hospital corridor felt like the epicenter of a warzone.
Bradley had stormed out of the ultrasound suite, leaving Tiffany sobbing hysterically on the exam table. Margaret and Brittany chased after him, their designer heels clicking frantically against the linoleum.
“Bradley! Stop walking! What did the CFO say?” Brittany demanded, grabbing his bicep.
Bradley ripped his arm away, his chest heaving as if he couldn’t pull enough oxygen into his lungs. “We lost the three main accounts. Almost ten million in revenue, gone. Plus the penalty fees.”
Margaret swayed, putting a hand to her chest. “Lord almighty. How could this happen today of all days?”
A young woman from the billing department approached them tentatively, holding a terminal. “Excuse me, Mr. Bradley? The card you placed on file for Miss Tiffany’s premium care package… it was declined. I need another form of payment.”
Brittany rolled her eyes, pulling out her own platinum card. “Honestly, the incompetence. Run mine.”
The billing clerk swiped it. A harsh beep echoed. “I’m sorry, ma’am. It says ‘Transaction Error’.”
“That’s impossible, I have no limit,” Brittany snapped. “Run it again.”
“Still declined. The system is flagging it as a frozen account.”
Bradley felt a cold, venomous dread coil in his gut. He ripped his wallet from his pocket and threw his black corporate card on the counter. “Use this one. And hurry up.”
The clerk swiped it. The screen flashed a bright, aggressive red. ACCOUNT FROZEN – COURT ORDER INJUNCTION.
“Sir… all your accounts are locked,” the clerk said, her voice dropping to a nervous whisper.
Bradley snatched the card back, his hands shaking violently. He dialed his private banker on speed dial. The phone barely rang once before the frantic voice of his account manager answered.
“Bradley, I was just about to call you. It’s a disaster.”
“Why are my cards declining? Why is my sister’s card declining?” Bradley bellowed, drawing stares from across the lobby.
“A judge signed an emergency ex parte injunction an hour ago. Every single account tied to your name, your businesses, and your immediate family members involved in your trusts has been frozen pending litigation.”
Bradley’s teeth ground together so hard his jaw ached. “Who the hell filed the injunction?!”
There was a heavy pause on the line. “It was filed by a Mr. Harrison, representing his client… Sarah.”
The name hit Bradley with the force of a freight train. Sarah. The quiet, submissive housewife who had barely spoken above a whisper for the last six months. The woman who had meekly handed over her keys this morning without a single tear.
“That’s impossible,” Bradley breathed, his mind rejecting the reality. “She doesn’t have the money for a lawyer like that. She doesn’t have the grounds!”
“She provided the judge with a mountain of evidence, Bradley. Wire frauds, misappropriation of marital funds, corporate embezzlement to fund real estate purchases. The judge locked everything down. You have zero liquidity.”
The phone slipped from Bradley’s grip, clattering onto the polished hospital floor.
“Bradley? What is it?” Margaret cried, shaking him.
Bradley looked at his mother, his eyes completely hollow. “Sarah. She froze the money. All of it.”
“That little mouse?” Brittany shrieked, her voice echoing down the hall. “I’ll kill her! I’ll call my lawyers right now!”
Before Brittany could reach for her phone, Bradley’s screen lit up on the floor. It was a number he didn’t recognize. He picked it up slowly, pressing it to his ear.
“Hello?”
“Mr. Bradley,” a deep, calm voice echoed through the speaker. “This is Harrison. I am Sarah’s legal counsel.”
“You listen to me, you ambulance chaser—”
“I suggest you save your breath,” Harrison cut him off smoothly. “I am calling as a professional courtesy. The court has granted our motion. Your financial assets are suspended. But that is the least of your concerns right now.”
“What are you talking about?”