He Called Her Unfit Beside The Baby, Then The FBI Walked Into His Meeting-kieutrinh

The FaceTime call came at 2:43 a.m., when Sophia Knight was half-asleep in the wide white bed Alex had insisted belonged in the center of their Manhattan penthouse.

She reached for the phone carefully because she was five months pregnant, and every sudden movement now belonged to the baby before it belonged to her.

The caller ID said Jessica Blake, which made no sense until the screen opened and Sophia saw bare shoulders, blond hair, and the custom marble wall of the Aspen cabin she had designed herself.

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Behind Jessica, Alexander Knight laughed in a voice Sophia knew better than her own heartbeat.

Jessica turned her head and purred, “Come back to bed, baby. We have three more days before you go back to your pathetic wife.”

Then Jessica saw the active call, froze, and ended it.

Sophia sat in the dark with one hand on her stomach while Charlotte kicked hard under her palm.

Alex texted first, then called, then texted again with a lie so insulting that for a second it almost looked like panic.

He said Jessica had meant to call her boyfriend, that the man behind her only looked like him, and that he was still at a blockchain conference in Denver.

Sophia opened the financial accounts because love could lie, but charges had timestamps.

The records showed Tiffany, La Perla, first-class tickets, Aspen fuel, and a hotel authorization attached to the exact weekend Alex had claimed to be onstage in Colorado.

Her grandmother’s engagement ring was gone from the jewelry drawer, and Alex had said it was being cleaned.

By dawn she had emailed the screenshots to Emma Patterson, her oldest friend and the one person in New York who could turn panic into a plan.

She expected Alex to come home with excuses.

Instead, he came home with Jessica.

He walked into the bedroom in a Tom Ford suit, all concern and polished voice, while Jessica stood behind him wearing Sophia’s missing necklace under a silk blouse.

“Sophia, baby, you’re having another episode,” he said.

The word landed harder than the affair.

Alex showed her a medical report from Dr. Harrison, the obstetrician who had monitored her pregnancy and played squash with Alex at Princeton reunions.

The report described paranoid delusions, public crying, threats toward Jessica, and dangerous financial confusion.

None of it had happened.

Jessica then produced text messages from Sophia’s number, each one cruel, frantic, and fake.

Sophia stared at them and saw the shape of the cage.

This was not damage control.

This was architecture.

The next morning, a process server delivered an emergency motion for financial conservatorship.

Alex had frozen their joint accounts, locked her out of investment dashboards, and contacted every major firm in the city so no one could represent her without a conflict.

At the bank, a manager who used to bring her coffee threatened to call security because Mr. Knight had warned them she was unstable.

Someone filmed her crying beside the marble counter.

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