Part III: I Won $97 Million… Then I told my husband that I was fired. đ
đ Continue to Part 5: The Meeting Richard Begged For⊠And the Truth That Made Daniel Go Silent đš
11:07 PM.
Rain covered the city in silver streaks as Daniel drove through downtown Los Angeles with both hands tight on the steering wheel.
Neither of us spoke much.
The address they sent led to an old industrial district near the river â warehouses, chain-link fences, broken streetlights, and buildings that looked abandoned but somehow still watched you.
Daniel parked half a block away.
âWe shouldnât be here,â he muttered.
But he still checked the small handgun hidden beneath the seat.
I stared at him.
âYou never told me you had that.â
âI forgot I even owned it.â
That somehow scared me more.
Because Daniel wasnât a violent man.
But fear changes people.
Especially when they think the person they love is in danger.
The warehouse ahead looked dead.
No signs.
No workers.
No movement.
Only one dim light glowing inside.
Daniel turned toward me.
âListen carefully.â
âI know.â
âIf anything feels wrong, you run.â
âAnd leave you?â
âYes.â
âNo.â
His jaw tightened.
âMayaââ
âIâm not leaving you.â
For a second, neither of us moved.
Then he leaned forward and kissed my forehead.
Not romantic.
Terrified.
Like someone trying to memorize a goodbye without saying it.
We walked toward the warehouse together.
The massive metal door was already open.
Inside smelled like dust, oil, and cold concrete.
And thereâŠ
âŠsitting at a folding table beneath a hanging industrial lampâŠ
âŠwas Richard.
Chelseaâs husband looked completely destroyed.
Bruised face.
Split lip.
Wrinkled clothes.
Hands shaking uncontrollably.
The moment he saw us, he stood up too quickly.
âDanielââ
Daniel punched him so hard he crashed into the table.
The sound echoed through the warehouse.
I gasped.
Richard groaned on the floor while Daniel stood over him breathing heavily.
âYou sold us?â
Richard spit blood onto the concrete.
âI didnât have a choice.â
Daniel grabbed his shirt violently.
âYou used MY HOUSE!â
âThey were going to kill me!â
âAnd now they might kill HER!â
He pointed at me.
Richardâs face twisted with panic.
âI tried to fix it!â
Daniel looked ready to hit him again when another voice interrupted calmly from the shadows.
âThat wonât solve anything.â
Three men stepped forward.
Expensive coats.
Clean shoes.
Emotionless eyes.
Not street thugs.
Worse.
Professional.
One of them â tall, gray-haired, controlled â studied us carefully.
âYouâre Maya.â
It wasnât a question.
I stayed silent.
The man nodded slightly.
âYouâre smarter than Richard described.â
Daniel immediately moved in front of me.
âWeâre not giving you money.â
The man almost smiled.
âThis stopped being about money several days ago.â
Cold spread through my stomach.
âWhat does that mean?â
The man walked slowly around the table.
âRichard borrowed six million dollars through people connected to investment laundering operations.â
I frowned.
âWhat?â
âHe helped move money through fake salon expansions, shell vendors, and false invoices. When the business failed, our associates became⊠unhappy.â
Richard looked at the floor.
Daniel stared at him in disbelief.
âYou were laundering money?â
Richard whispered:
âI didnât know at first.â
The gray-haired man laughed softly.
âThey all say that.â
Then his eyes returned to me.
âRichard became desperate after discovering your financial situation.â
Danielâs fists clenched again.
âHe thought if he brought us a wealthy household, his debt could be negotiated.â
I felt sick.
Like prey.
Like an object people were trading.
The man continued:
âBut then something changed.â
Silence filled the warehouse.
Richard looked terrified now.
The man tilted his head slightly.
âSomeone else became interested in you, Maya.â
Every instinct in my body screamed.
âWhat are you talking about?â
The man studied me carefully.
âThe lottery created visibility. Visibility attracts attention.â
Danielâs voice sharpened instantly.
âFrom who?â
The gray-haired man paused.
Then finally answered:
âPeople with much more power than us.â
The warehouse suddenly felt freezing cold.
Richard looked like he wanted to disappear.
Danielâs breathing slowed dangerously.
âWhat people?â
The man ignored the question.
âYour bank activity triggered alerts. Large movements. New structures. Multiple consultations. Defensive positioning.â
I realized what he meant.
Someone had been watching long before Richard.
The gray-haired man folded his hands calmly.
âVery wealthy people rarely stay invisible without protection.â
Daniel stared at him.
âYouâre saying someone targeted Maya because she won?â
âNo.â
The manâs eyes locked onto mine.
âIâm saying someone targeted Maya because seventy-eight million dollars suddenly appeared around someone unprotected.â
|A horrible silence followed.
Then he said the sentence that changed everything:=
âYou were never being watched by debt collectors alone.â
My pulse started hammering.
âWhat does that mean?â
The man glanced toward the warehouse entrance.
Almost nervous.
That terrified me more than anything else.
Because men like him didnât scare easily.
Then headlights suddenly flooded the warehouse walls.
Bright.
Blinding.
Multiple vehicles pulling in outside.
The gray-haired manâs face changed instantly.
ââŠDamn.â
Richard panicked.
âOh God noââ
Daniel grabbed my hand immediately.
âWhatâs happening?â
The gray-haired man stepped backward slowly.
âYou need to leave.â
Daniel didnât move.
âWhoâs outside?â
The man looked directly at me.
And for the first time since we metâŠ
âŠI saw genuine fear in his eyes.
Then he whispered:
âThe people who actually own the debt.â
## đ Continue to Part 6: The Men Who Owned the Debt⊠And Why Mayaâs Lottery Win Wasnât an Accident đš
The warehouse doors exploded open.
Not dramatically.
Precisely.
Like men entering a room they already owned.
Five black SUVs rolled into the loading area one after another, headlights flooding the concrete walls so brightly I had to shield my eyes.
Then the engines shut off together.
Silence.
Heavy.
Controlled.
Terrifying.
The gray-haired man beside us cursed quietly under his breath.
Richard started shaking violently.
âOh God⊠oh GodâŠâ
Daniel pulled me behind him instinctively.
Three men stepped out first.
Dark suits.
No visible weapons.
Cold expressions.
And thenâŠ
âŠthe fourth person emerged.
A woman.
Tall.
Elegant.
Silver earrings catching the warehouse light.
Black gloves.
Perfect posture.
She didnât move like a criminal.
She moved like someone accustomed to power.
Everyone in the warehouse became still the moment she appeared.
Even the gray-haired man lowered his eyes slightly.
Thatâs when I understood:
She outranked all of them.
The woman walked forward slowly, heels echoing against the concrete.
Then she stopped directly in front of me.
âMaya.â
Not a question.
Daniel immediately stepped between us.
âWho are you?â
The woman ignored him.
Her eyes stayed on me.
âYouâve caused a very inconvenient amount of movement in a very short period of time.â
My heart pounded.
âI donât know what youâre talking about.â
âNo,â she replied calmly.
âBut your money does.â
The gray-haired man stepped carefully backward.
âWe fulfilled our side. Richard is here.â
The woman didnât even look at him.
âYou exceeded your authority the moment you started threatening civilians.â
His face tightened instantly.
So even HE was scared of her.
Danielâs voice sharpened.
âWhat does any of this have to do with my wife?â
Finally, the woman looked at him.
And somehow that was worse.
Because her face held no emotion whatsoever.
âYour wife won seventy-eight million dollars through a ticket purchased at a small corner store three weeks ago.â
Danielâs grip on my hand tightened.
The woman continued:
âThe financial movements afterward triggered monitoring systems tied to several private interests.â
I frowned.
âPrivate interests?â
âA large amount of unprotected money attracts attention.â
She said it so casually.
Like predators discussing weather.
Then she tilted her head slightly.
âThe problem is not the lottery itself.â
Cold crawled up my spine.
âThen what is the problem?â
The woman looked directly into my eyes.
âThe timing.â
Silence.
Daniel spoke first.
âWhat timing?â
The woman finally removed one black glove slowly.
âTwo months ago, several laundering pipelines connected to offshore movement operations collapsed.â
The gray-haired man looked away.
Richard looked sick.
The woman continued:
âMillions disappeared. Accounts froze. Certain individuals became desperate.â
Then her gaze returned to me.
âAnd suddenly⊠a woman with no prior high-net-worth profile wins almost one hundred million dollars.â
I stared at her.
âWhat are you saying?â
âIâm saying people began asking questions.â
Daniel stepped forward.
âShe won legally.â
âYes,â the woman said calmly.
âWe verified that.â
Daniel frowned.
âThen what do you want?â
The womanâs expression darkened slightly.
âWe want to know whether someone used the lottery to clean money through you.â
My brain stopped.
âWhat?!â
Richard started shouting immediately.
âI TOLD YOU SHE DIDNâT KNOW ANYTHING!â
The woman silenced him with one glance.
Daniel looked furious now.
âThis is insane.â
âPerhaps,â she replied.
âBut people have died over less.â
The warehouse became deathly quiet.
Then suddenlyâŠ
âŠI understood something horrifying.
The bank transfers.
The monitoring.
The sudden attention.
They werenât only watching me because I was rich.
They thought I might unknowingly be connected to financial crimes.
I whispered:
âThe ticket was realâŠâ
The woman studied me carefully.
âYes.â
âThen why are you here?â
For the first timeâŠ
âŠshe actually looked tired.
âBecause powerful people dislike uncertainty.â
Danielâs voice lowered dangerously.
âSo what happens now?â
The woman glanced toward the SUVs outside.
âThat depends on whether Maya is telling the truth.â
Daniel laughed once in disbelief.
âShe IS telling the truth.â
The woman ignored him.
Instead, she reached into her coat and pulled out a thin folder.
Black.
Just like mine.
She handed it to me.
Inside were photographs.
My bank visits.
The lottery office.
Security footage.
Copies of transaction timestamps.
But thenâŠ
âŠI reached the final page.
And my blood froze.
It was a photo of Mrs. Lupitaâs corner store.
Circled in red marker.
Beneath it was one sentence:
âTicket machine compromised 48 hours before jackpot.â
I stopped breathing.
Daniel immediately noticed my face.
âWhat?â
My hands trembled.
âNoâŠâ
The woman watched me carefully.
âWe investigated the retailer after irregular system activity was detected.â
I looked up slowly.
âYou think the ticket was fake?â
âNo,â she replied quietly.
âWe think someone intended for that ticket to win.â
The warehouse tilted around me.
Daniel grabbed the folder from my hands.
Richard looked horrified.
The gray-haired man whispered:
ââŠJesus Christ.â
Then the woman delivered the sentence that shattered everything I thought I knew:
âMaya⊠we donât believe you stole the money.â
She paused.
âWe believe someone may have used you.â
## đ Continue to Part 7: The Real Owner of the Ticket⊠And Why Maya Was Chosen đš
The warehouse went completely silent.
Not normal silence.
The kind where your brain refuses to process what it just heard.
Daniel stared at the folder.
Then at me.
Then back at the woman.
âWhat do you mean⊠used her?â
The woman folded her gloves carefully.
âThree weeks before the jackpot, the lottery terminal at Mrs. Lupitaâs store was remotely accessed.â
I shook my head immediately.
âThatâs impossible.â
âNo,â she replied calmly.
âJust expensive.â
The gray-haired man looked deeply uncomfortable now.
Richard looked like he wanted the floor to swallow him whole.
Daniel stepped closer to the woman.
âStart talking clearly.â
She nodded once.
âThe winning ticket was legitimate. The numbers existed. The payout exists. Taxes were paid legally.â
âThen whatâs the problem?â
âThe problem,â she said quietly,
âis that the ticket may never have been intended for Maya.â
Cold spread through my chest.
I whispered:
ââŠWhat?â
The woman opened another document.
âThere are indications someone manipulated the system before the draw.â
Daniel frowned.
âTo guarantee the numbers?â
âNo. That would be too visible.â
âThen what?â
She looked directly at me.
âTo guarantee who received the winning ticket.â
I felt dizzy.
âThat makes no sense.â
âIt does if someone needed a clean citizen with no criminal record, modest income, stable taxes, and no major investigations tied to their name.â
Danielâs face slowly changed.
Like pieces were connecting inside his head.
Then he looked at me carefully.
âYou bought the ticket after work, right?â
âYesâŠâ
âAt the exact same store you always use?â
âYes.â
The woman nodded slightly.
âPatterns matter.â
Then she pulled out another photo.
Security footage from the store.
Timestamped.
I moved closer slowly.
And my stomach dropped.
A man appeared on-screen near the lottery machine minutes before I bought the ticket.
Black baseball cap.
Gray jacket.
Face mostly hidden.
But what terrified me wasnât him.
It was what he was doing.
Opening the back panel of the machine.
Daniel whispered:
âWhat the hellâŠâ
The woman continued:
âThe machine briefly disconnected from the lottery network before reconnecting.â
I looked at her.
âYou think that man planted the winning ticket?â
âWe think the system was manipulated to direct a pre-selected winning sequence toward a specific purchaser profile.â
Daniel stared in disbelief.
âThat sounds insane.â
âYes,â she replied.
âBut so does a random seventy-eight million dollar jackpot appearing directly beside multiple active laundering investigations.â
The warehouse suddenly felt freezing again.
Richard muttered weakly:
âI told them she didnât knowâŠâ
The woman ignored him.
Then she looked at me with strange intensity.
âMaya⊠did anything unusual happen that day?â
I opened my mouth.
Stopped.
Because suddenlyâŠ
âŠI remembered something.
Something tiny.
Something I dismissed completely at the time.
Mrs. Lupita.
Smiling strangely when I entered.
Telling me:
âGood luck, sweetie.â
Not weird by itself.
ExceptâŠ
âŠshe had already printed the ticket before I finished choosing my snacks.
Daniel noticed my face instantly.
âWhat?â
I swallowed hard.
âShe already had the ticket ready.â
The entire warehouse became still.
The womanâs eyes narrowed slightly.
âExplain.â
âI walked in after work. I grabbed coffee and chips. But when I reached the counter⊠she already had the ticket sitting beside the register.â
Daniel frowned.
âBut you chose the numbers yourself.â
âI thought I didâŠâ
Then another memory hit me.
Hard.
Mrs. Lupita insisting:
âTry Quick Pick this time. Trust me.â
My pulse exploded.
I had NEVER used Quick Pick before.
Never.
I always chose personal numbers.
Always.
The woman stepped closer carefully.
âBut that day you changed?â
I nodded slowly.
âOh my GodâŠâ
Daniel looked disturbed now.
âMayaâŠâ
I could barely breathe.
âI remember feeling weird about itâŠâ
The womanâs voice lowered.
âDid you keep the original ticket?â
âYes.â
âWhere?â
âIn a safety deposit box.â
The woman exchanged a look with one of the suited men behind her.
Then she spoke carefully.
âWe need to examine it.â
Daniel immediately stepped forward.
âNo.â
The woman finally showed the slightest sign of irritation.
âYou donât understand the situation.â
âNo,â Daniel replied coldly.
âYou donât understand ME.â
That actually surprised her.
Because everyone else in the warehouse feared her.
But Daniel only looked protective.
Dangerously protective.
The woman studied him quietly for several seconds.
Then asked:
âYou really didnât know about the money?â
âNo.â
âAnd you defended her anyway.â
Danielâs jaw tightened.
âSheâs my wife.â
Something flickered briefly across the womanâs face.
Not emotion exactly.
Recognition.
Then suddenlyâ
BZZZZZT.
One of the suited men received a call through an earpiece.
His expression changed instantly.
He turned toward the woman.
âWe found the retailer.â
Everyone froze.
Mrs. Lupita.
The woman spoke sharply:
âAlive?â
The man hesitated.
ââŠBarely.â
My stomach dropped.
âWhat happened?â
The suited man swallowed.
âStore was burned twenty minutes ago.â
Silence.
Pure horror-filled silence.
The woman closed her eyes briefly.
Too late.
Someone was already cleaning up evidence.
Then the man added one final sentence:
âAnd thereâs something else.â
The woman looked at him.
He glanced toward me nervously.
âThe witness said Mrs. Lupita kept repeating one name before collapsing.â
My heart hammered violently.
âWhat name?â
The suited man answered quietly.
âMayaâ