A Boy in the Video Called My Late Fiance Dad, Standing Before My Bestie’s Wedding Photo Chapter 09
“The timeline is correcting itself,” I said coolly as IÂ
watched the changes unfold.Â
“Seven years ago, your assets were frozenÂ
because of your fraud charges. Your companyÂ
went bankrupt. Naturally, seven years later, youÂ
wouldn’t still own luxury items that were purchased with stolen money.”Â
On the screen, the custom–built glassÂ
conservatory suddenly emitted a piercing crack.Â
Then the glass panels began disappearing pieceÂ
by piece.Â
Even Vivian’s favorite wooden hair clip vanishedÂ
into thin air.Â
“No! Stop!” Julian screamed at the screen.Â
“Hazel, make it stop!”Â
“You can’t stop it,” I replied calmly.Â
For the next two weeks, I practically lived betweenÂ
my attorney’s office and the police station.Â
I never visited Julian or Vivian.Â
I had no interest in hearing their apologies.Â
Or their insults.Â
My only goal was making sure every crime theyÂ
committed stuck.Â
Insurance fraud involving an exceptionally largeÂ
amount of money.Â
Bigamy backed by overwhelming evidence.Â
Each charge carried enough weight to keep JulianÂ
behind bars for a very long time.Â
Vivian was indicted as well for assisting inÂ
document fraud, aiding concealment, and helpingÂ
transfer illegally obtained funds.Â
With all of her assets frozen, she couldn’t evenÂ
afford a top–tier defense attorney.Â
Her court–appointed lawyer advised her that theÂ
only chance of receiving leniency was cooperatingÂ
with authorities and helping recover the stolenÂ
money.Â
So inside detention, the two former star–crossedÂ
lovers began tearing each other apart.Â
Julian disclosed every detail of Vivian’s role inÂ
convincing him to fake his death.Â
Vivian handed over recordings proving that JulianÂ
had bribed a physician to issue a fraudulent deathÂ
certificate.Â
Throughout those two weeks, the video call remained connected in a bizarre, impossible way.Â
Whenever my phone needed charging, I plugged itÂ
- in.Â
Other than that, I carried it everywhere.Â
I wanted the future versions of them to watch.Â
I wanted them to witness every consequence ofÂ
their actions as their own sins slowly consumed them.Â
Day by day.Â
Piece by piece.Â
The mansion in the future timeline continuedÂ
changing.Â
Eventually, it wasn’t a waterfront luxury estateÂ
anymore.Â
It became a cramped, damp rental apartment.Â
The paint peeled from the walls.Â
The air looked heavy with mildew.Â
Seven–years–later Julian wore wrinkled clothes.Â
His beard was unkempt.Â
Hopelessness filled his eyes.Â
The company was gone.Â
The yacht was gone.Â
The custom–tailored suits were gone.Â
The judgment handed down seven years earlierÂ
was rewriting both his reality and his memories.Â
Now he was a convicted felon with a seriousÂ
criminal record and no chance of finding aÂ
respectable job.Â
The little boy, who had looked seven or eight yearsÂ
old, was gone too.Â
I had asked him what happened.Â
Future Julian broke down crying.Â
“He’s gone.”Â
His voice cracked.Â
“After the trial seven years ago, Vivian suffered aÂ
complete mental breakdown while she was beingÂ
held in detention. She lost the baby.”Â
Tears streamed down his face.Â
“We never had another child after that.”Â
I felt absolutely nothing.Â
Not sympathy.Â
Not regret.Â
Nothing.Â
Because if that impossible phone call had neverÂ
happened, I would have been the one who died.Â
My mother would have been the one who lost herÂ
mind.Â
The moment I learned the truth, every ounce ofÂ
kindness and patience I had left for them diedÂ
forever.

