November 15th, 2024.

7:12 a.m.A 911 call.

A Manhattan penthouse.

A dead billionaire.

Shake Fad al-Mansour, 47 years old, worth over $200 million, is found lying on his couch.

No wounds, no signs of a struggle, just gone.

His assistant is hysterical.

He was fine last night.

He wasn’t sick.

Paramedics check for a pulse.

Nothing.

Body’s cold.

He’s been dead for hours.

The scene looks clean.

Peaceful even.

A half-finished glass of scotch on the table.

His gold watch still ticking on his wrist.

The balcony door cracked open, letting in the cold November air.

Natural causes.

That’s what everyone assumes.

But 6 hours later, an ER doctor reviewing his blood work sees something that stops her cold.

His glucose level, 23, dangerously, impossibly low.

Elevated insulin, suppressed at pepta.

This wasn’t a heart attack.

This wasn’t natural.

Shik Fahad al- Mansour was poisoned.

And the woman who did it had already walked out the door, calm, quiet, invisible.

What she’d been hiding would shock investigators.

And what led her to that moment would break your heart.

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Turn on the bell and step inside the world where truth meets tragedy.

To understand what happened in that penthouse, you have to go back not to the night Fahad died, but to the life he was living long before that morning in November.

Shik Fahad al-Mansour was 47 years old.

Born into one of Dubai’s wealthiest families, he’d built an empire in luxury real estate development.

His projects dotted the skyline, glass towers that caught the sunset, hotels that hosted royalty.

In public, he was everything you’d expect.

Generous, charming, a devoted father to three daughters.

He donated to children’s hospitals.

He funded scholarships for underprivileged students.

At charity gallas, he was the first to write a check.

But at home, behind the marble walls of his Dubai villa, things were different.

His marriage to Amira had been arranged 22 years earlier.

It wasn’t loveless.

Not exactly, but it had become hollow.

They shared meals in silence.

They slept in separate wings of the house.

They spoke to each other the way colleagues do, polite, careful, distant.

Amamira had stopped asking where he was going.

Fad had stopped pretending he wanted to stay.

He traveled constantly.

New York, London, Singapore.

Always for business, he said.

Always necessary.

And maybe it was.

But it was also easier than sitting across from someone who knew you’d stopped trying.

His daughters adored him.

When he came home, he brought gifts.

He asked about school.

He listened, but then his phone would ring and he’d step into another room and the door would close and they’d hear his voice drop into that language reserved for things they weren’t meant to understand.

Fahad wasn’t cruel.

He wasn’t cold.

He was just absent even when he was there.

And that absence, that emotional distance followed him everywhere, including New York.

In early 2023, Fad hired a design firm called Lux Interiors to renovate his Manhattan penthouse.

He wanted it updated, modern, comfortable enough for the months he’d spend there avoiding home.

That’s when he met Marisel Santos.

She was 34, Filipina, soft-spoken.

She had this way of listening that made people feel heard.

When she walked into a room, she noticed things.

The light, the mood, the small details other designers missed.

But what Fahad didn’t know, what he couldn’t have known from those first meetings was that Marisel was barely holding on.

She’d come to the United States 6 years earlier on a work visa, trained as an interior designer in Manila.

She was talented.

She had an eye for color, for texture, for the small things that made a space feel like home.

But talent doesn’t pay rent in New York, so she worked.

And then she worked some more.

By day, she was a junior designer at Lux Interiors.

By night, she freelanced, rendering 3D mock-ups for clients she’d never meet, answering emails at midnight, tweaking floor plans until her eyes burned.

She sent money home every month.

Her father had passed when she was 19.

Her mother had diabetes and hypertension.

Her younger brother was still in college.

Her sister had two kids and a husband who drank too much.

Marisel was the one they called when the hospital bills came, when the roof leaked, when tuition was due.

She didn’t mind, or maybe she did, but she’d stopped letting herself think about it.

Her phone screen was cracked in three places.

She drank instant coffee because the good stuff was too expensive.

She hadn’t been to a doctor in 2 years.

At night, she video called her mother, who looked smaller every time.

Her voice was getting weaker.

The calls were getting shorter.

“Are you eating enough, Anak?” her mother would ask.

“Yes, mama.

Don’t worry.

” But Marisel wasn’t eating enough.

She was surviving on eggs and rice.

She was losing weight she didn’t have to lose.

She was waking up at 4 in the morning with her heart racing, her chest tight, her mind already running through everything she had to do that day.

She was tired.

The kind of tired that sleep doesn’t fix.

And she was lonely.

Not the kind of loneliness that comes from being alone.

She was rarely alone.

Her apartment was small.

Her days were loud.

Her phone never stopped buzzing.

But she was lonely in the way that happens when no one really sees you.

When you’re useful but not valued, when people need you but don’t ask how you’re doing.

She hadn’t been on a date in over a year.

She hadn’t been touched, really touched, held, seen in longer than that.

So when Fahad al-Mansour walked into that design consultation and actually looked at her, when he asked her opinion, when he listened, when he remembered her name, something shifted.

He was wealthy, yes.

Powerful, yes.

But more than that, he seemed kind.

He seemed interested.

He made her feel like she mattered.

And Fhat, he saw someone who wasn’t asking him for anything.

Someone who smiled without expecting something in return.

Someone who didn’t look at him and see a checkbook or a title or a failure of a husband.

He saw warmth, simplicity, peace.

Two people, both successful in their own ways, both exhausted, both invisible in their own lives.

They were both lonely, which is exactly how the tragedy began.

The penthouse renovation took 3 months.

Marisel came by twice a week with fabric swatches, paint samples, furniture catalogs.

Fad was there more often than most clients.

He said he wanted to oversee the details personally.

But really, he just wanted to talk to her.

He noticed things.

The way she tucked her hair behind her ear when she was thinking.

The way she bit her lip when a client rejected her ideas.

The way she never ordered anything for herself during meetings, even when he offered.

One afternoon in May 2023, she presented him with three options for the living room curtains.

He looked at them for maybe 5 seconds.

Which one do you like? He asked.

She blinked.

It’s your home, Mr.

Almensour.

It should be what you prefer.

I’m asking what you prefer.

She hesitated, pointed to the middle option, a soft linen in pale gray.

This one? It catches the light without overwhelming the space.

He smiled.

Then that’s the one.

It was a small moment, but for Marisel, it felt enormous.

In a job where she was constantly second-guessed, dismissed, overruled by men who knew less than she did, someone was actually listening.

The compliments started slowly, professional at first.

You have a real gift for this.

Your instincts are better than anyone I’ve worked with, then softer, more personal.

You work too hard.

You should take care of yourself.

She didn’t know what to do with that.

So she smiled, said thank you, went home and replayed the conversation in her head.

Then one day in June, near the end of the project, Fad called her into his study.

He closed the door.

“I want to ask you something personal,” he said.

“And you can say no.

” Her stomach tightened.

“You mentioned once that you’re still paying off loans from design school.

” She nodded slowly.

How much do you owe? Mr.

Almansour, I didn’t.

How much, Marisel? $18,000.

He nodded slowly like he was considering something.

What if I helped with that? Her eyes widened.

Mr.

Al-Mansour, I couldn’t just think about it.

He pulled out his phone, opened his banking app, and held it toward her.

If you’re comfortable, you can enter the loan company details here.

Payment gets sent directly.

No checks, no paperwork, just handled.

She stared at the screen.

Her heart was pounding.

I don’t I don’t know what to say.

You don’t have to say anything.

You don’t even have to do it right now.

But the offer stands.

She looked at him at the phone, at the way he was watching her, not pushing, just waiting.

Her hands were shaking when she took the phone.

It took her 3 minutes to enter the information.

Account number, routing number, loan service name.

The whole time, she kept pausing, looking up at him like she was waiting for him to stop her.

He didn’t.

When she handed the phone back, he tapped twice, confirmed the transfer, and showed her the screen.

Payment confirmation.

Loan account.

Balance zero.

She stood there, frozen.

Her hand started shaking.

He came around the desk, put a hand on her shoulder.

Gentle, warm.

You’re talented.

You work harder than anyone I know.

You deserve to breathe a little.

That night, back in her apartment, she sat on the edge of her bed and cried.

Not sad tears, not happy tears, either.

Something in between, relief, maybe, confusion, gratitude, fear.

She covered her mouth with her hand so her roommate wouldn’t hear.

The next week, Fad asked her to dinner.

Not at a restaurant, at the penthouse, just the two of them.

She knew what it meant.

She wasn’t naive.

But she also wasn’t sure she cared anymore.

He poured wine.

They talked about everything except work.

He asked about her family, her childhood, her dreams.

And he listened.

Really listened.

Not the way men usually did, waiting for their turn to talk.

He asked follow-up questions.

He remembered details.

At the end of the night, he kissed her.

soft, careful, like he was asking permission.

She kissed him back and that’s when the rules started.

He never said them all at once.

They came in pieces.

Gentle suggestions that didn’t feel like restrictions until later.

Let’s keep this between us.

I don’t want to complicate things for you at work.

That made sense.

No photos, okay? I have a very public life.

I’m sure you understand.

She understood.

I can’t do overnight stays.

My schedule is unpredictable.

Of course, let’s avoid restaurants.

Somewhere quiet is better, more intimate.

It sounded romantic.

And every time she started to ask a question about his wife, about the future, about what they were doing, he would check his watch, that soft click of gold against his wrist.

Then he’d smile, kiss her forehead, and say the same thing.

Let’s keep things simple.

Simple meant don’t ask.

Simple meant don’t expect.

Simple meant take what I give you and be grateful.

And for a while, she was because $18,000 of debt was gone.

Because someone powerful thought she mattered.

Because when she was with him, she didn’t feel invisible anymore.

She mistook his boundaries for protection, not control.

For the first few months, it felt like something real.

Fad would text her in the morning.

Good morning messages.

Sometimes just a coffee emoji, small things that made her feel thought about.

He’d invite her over two, sometimes three times a week.

They’d have dinner, talk, laugh.

He’d ask about her day, her projects, her mother’s health.

She knew he was married.

He’d never hidden that.

He’d told her early on.

His marriage was over in everything but name.

They lived separate lives.

Amamira knew he had his own world in New York.

It was an understanding, he said.

Cultural, complicated.

We stay together for the girls.

he’d told her once.

But we’re not really together anymore.

Marisel had wanted to believe him.

And for a while, she did because he made her feel special, chosen, like she wasn’t just another obligation in his life, but something he actually wanted.

But by September 2023, things started to shift.

The texts became less frequent, the dinners more sporadic.

He’d go a week without calling, then show up at her apartment unannounced at 10 at night, smiling like nothing had changed.

“I missed you,” he’d say.

And she’d let him in.

Every time, but the inconsistency was eating at her.

One week he was warm, attentive, present.

The next he was distant, distracted, his responses short.

When she asked if something was wrong, he’d say he was just busy.

Work is overwhelming right now.

I have a lot on my plate.

You know how it is.

She did know, or at least she wanted to believe she did.

But the questions kept coming.

Questions she didn’t want to ask, but couldn’t stop thinking about.

One night in early October, she tried.

They were sitting on his couch.

He was scrolling through his phone.

She was watching him.

Fahad h where do you see this going? He looked up, smiled.

What do you mean us? This? Are you ever going to actually leave? His smile didn’t change, but something behind his eyes did.

I’ve told you.

It’s complicated.

You’ve been saying that for months.

He set his phone down, took her hand.

Marisel, I care about you.

You know that.

But you’re not going to leave her.

Silence.

It’s not that simple.

There’s the girls, the family, business ties.

I can’t just walk away.

So, what am I supposed to do? Just wait? I’m not asking you to wait for anything.

I’m here now.

Isn’t that enough? It wasn’t.

But she didn’t know how to say that without sounding desperate.

Then there were the phone calls.

Late at night, always in Arabic.

He’d step out onto the balcony, close the door, and talk in low tones she couldn’t understand.

When he came back in, he’d act like nothing happened.

But his mood would be different, colder, more distant.

One time, she walked toward the balcony while he was out there.

He saw her through the glass and held up a finger.

Wait, not now.

She stood there, frozen, then turned around and sat back down.

When he came back in, he kissed her forehead.

Sorry, business.

But it didn’t sound like business.

The final crack came in late October.

She’d come to the penthouse unannounced.

She still had the access fob from the renovation project.

He’d told her to keep it.

“So you don’t have to wait in the lobby,” he’d said.

She walked into the building, smiled at the doorman, an older man named Eugene, who always waved at her.

But this time, Eugene looked confused.

“Oh, Miss Santos, back again.

” She stopped.

“What do you mean?” He blinked, realizing his mistake.

“I just I thought I saw you yesterday.

Must have been someone else.

My apologies.

” But the way he said it, the way his face changed, like he was covering for something.

Eugene, was there another woman here yesterday? His face went red.

Ma’am, I really shouldn’t.

Was there? He hesitated, then nodded a few times, actually.

Different lady.

I don’t know her name.

Marisel felt the floor tilt under her feet.

Not just his wife.

Not just her.

Another woman.

maybe more than one.

She got into the elevator, pressed the button for Fad’s floor, watched the numbers climb.

Her hands were shaking.

The air felt too cold.

The buzzing of the elevator suddenly too loud.

When the doors opened, she stepped into the hallway and just stood there.

She didn’t go to his door.

She turned around, got back in the elevator, went home.

That night, she didn’t sleep.

She replayed every conversation, every moment, every time he’d checked his watch, every time he’d avoided a question, every time he’d said, “Let’s keep things simple.

” She thought about the rules.

No photos, no public places, no overnights.

Not because he was protecting her, because he was hiding her along with God knows who else.

The next morning, her phone buzzed.

A text from Fad.

Miss you.

Free tonight.

She stared at the screen, her chest tight, her throat burning.

She typed back, “Am I the only one?” Three dots appeared, then disappeared, then appeared again.

Finally, a response.

We should talk in person.

But they didn’t talk in person because he stopped answering her calls for 3 days.

Nothing.

No texts, no calls, no explanation, just silence.

And Marisel knew the way you know something in your bones before your brain catches up.

That she wasn’t special.

She was just convenient.

Her intuition was screaming.

and soon she would see the truth.

Three days of silence turned into four, then five.

Marisel kept checking her phone, refreshing her messages, telling herself he was just busy, that there was nation, that she was overreacting.

But deep down she knew better.

On the sixth day, November 2nd, 2024, Fahad finally texted, “Can you stop by tomorrow afternoon? Need your input on something for the study.

Not an apology, not an explanation, just business.

” She almost didn’t go.

She sat on her bed that night, staring at the message, her stomach in knots.

Part of her wanted to ignore him, to make him feel what she’d been feeling all week.

But the other part, the part that still wanted to believe this meant something, told her to go, to hear him out, to give him a chance to explain.

So she went.

November 3rd, 2:30 in the afternoon.

She arrived at the penthouse.

Fad was on a phone call when she walked in.

He waved her toward the study, mouthed 5 minutes, and kept talking.

She sat down at his desk, looked around.

The room smelled like his cologne.

Leather, expensive wood, everything in its place.

His laptop was open.

She wasn’t trying to snoop.

Not at first.

She was just sitting there waiting, her eyes drifting across the screen.

An email inbox.

Dozens of unread messages.

And then she saw a name, Vanessa Dupont.

Her chest tightened.

She glanced toward the door.

Fahad was still on the phone, pacing in the living room, his back to her.

She shouldn’t.

She knew she shouldn’t, but her hand moved anyway.

She clicked.

The email thread opened.

Confirming wire transfer for 200.

Let me know when you receive it.

Thank you for everything.

I’ll always be grateful.

Take care of yourself.

V.

Marisel’s breath caught.

She scrolled up, found another thread, another name.

Katrina Okampampo.

Rent assistance $2,800.

Account ending in $4491.

You’ve been so generous.

I don’t know what I would have done without you.

Her hands started shaking.

She kept scrolling.

More names, more transfers, more polite, grateful messages from women who thought they were special, too.

Her vision blurred.

She opened his calendar.

November 10th, final meeting with MS.

Ms.

Marisel Santos.

Final meeting.

Her stomach dropped.

She scrolled further.

Saw another email.

This one from a different address.

A Dubai domain.

The subject line transition plan US assets.

She opened it.

As discussed, we’ll be closing the New York residence by end of year.

All ongoing personal arrangements in the US should be concluded by mid November.

Family agrees this is the best course moving forward.

Concluded like she was a lease, a subscription, a service being cancelled.

And then at the bottom of the inbox, she saw it.

An email from Amamira al-Manssour.

The subject line was in Arabic, but the preview text was in English.

Your daughters miss you.

Leila asked when you’re coming home.

Marisel clicked it.

The email was short, calm, almost business-like.

Fahad, the girls are asking about you again.

Ila keeps checking the calendar to see when you’ll be back.

I know you have your obligations, but they need their father.

Please let me know your travel schedule so I can manage their expectations.

A obligations.

That’s what she was.

An obligation, a thing to manage.

She sat there frozen, staring at the screen.

everything she’d believed, every word he’d said, every touch, every promise that maybe one day this could be real.

It was all a lie.

Not even a lie.

Worse, it was a transaction.

She wasn’t special.

She wasn’t chosen.

She wasn’t loved.

She was maintained.

The humiliation hit first.

hot, burning, the kind that makes your skin crawl and your face flush.

She thought about every time she’d defended him to herself, every time she’d made excuses, every time she’d told herself he cared.

Then came the panic, cold, sharp.

Her visa renewal was 2 months away.

Her rent was going up in January.

Her mother’s medical bills were piling up.

She’d been counting on him, not because she wanted to, but because she’d had no choice.

And now he was leaving.

The rage came next.

White hot, blinding.

She wanted to scream, to throw something, to storm into the living room and shove the laptop in his face and make him look at what he’d done.

But she didn’t because the numbness swallowed everything else.

She just sat there, hands in her lap, staring at the screen.

She heard his voice behind her.

Sorry about that.

Work emergency.

He walked over, stood behind her chair, put his hand on her shoulder.

So, about the study.

I was thinking we could.

He stopped.

His eyes went to the laptop screen.

For a moment, neither of them moved.

Then, quietly, he said, “Maricel.

” She didn’t look at him.

How long were you planning to wait before telling me it’s not how long, Fahad? He stepped back, ran a hand through his hair.

You weren’t supposed to see that clearly.

Marisel, listen.

She stood up, turned to face him.

Her voice was steady.

Too steady.

Final meeting.

That’s what your calendar says.

Final meeting with MS.

When were you going to tell me? or were you just going to stop answering my calls and hope I figured it out? It’s more complicated than stop saying that.

Her voice cracked.

Stop telling me it’s complicated.

Just tell me the truth.

Was I ever anything more than this? He didn’t answer.

She laughed.

A hollow broken sound.

I thought I was different.

God, I actually thought.

Her voice broke.

She covered her mouth with her hand.

Fad took a step toward her.

I do care about you.

Don’t.

I mean it.

You don’t care about me.

You care about what I gave you.

You care about having someone who didn’t ask questions, who didn’t demand anything, who was just grateful.

He looked at her and for the first time he didn’t try to argue.

She picked up her bag, walked toward the door.

Marisel, wait.

She stopped, didn’t turn around.

Don’t contact me again.

She left.

And as she walked out of that building, past Eugene, the doorman who wouldn’t meet her eyes, into the cold November air, one truth settled over her like ice.

Her future wasn’t slipping away.

It had already been erased.

The first few days after the discovery, Maricel tried to hold it together.

She went to work, smiled at clients, presented design mock-ups, answered emails.

On the outside, she looked fine.

On the inside, she was falling apart.

She kept replaying that moment in his study.

The emails, the calendar, the cold clinical language.

Concluded final meeting.

Like she was a contract being terminated.

She told herself she was done with him, that she’d walked away with her dignity intact, that she didn’t need him.

But then the bills started coming.

November 7th, 2024.

A letter from US citizenship and immigration services.

Her work visa was up for renewal.

She needed to submit updated documentation, proof of continued employment, and a filing fee of 1,2.

She stared at the letter.

Her bank account had three on it.

November 9th, her landlord sent an email.

Effective January 1st, 2025, rent will increase to 20and per month due to building improvements, an extra $300 a month.

Money she didn’t have.

November 11th, a video call from her sister in Manila.

The connection was bad.

The image kept freezing.

Ate Marisel, it’s Mama.

Her heart stopped.

What happened? She collapsed yesterday.

They took her to the hospital.

Her sugar was too high.

They’re keeping her for observation.

How much? Her sister’s face crumpled.

23,000 pesos for the hospital bill.

And they want to run more tests.

Marisel did the math in her head.

about $400 plus medication plus follow-up appointments.

“I’ll send it,” she said automatically.

“Are you sure? I know things are tight.

I’ll send it.

” She ended the call, sat on her bed, stared at the wall.

$400 plus the visa fee, plus the rent increase, plus food, plus utilities, plus the student loan payment she still owed to her credit card because she’d been paying minimums for months.

The numbers didn’t add up.

No matter how she rearranged them, they didn’t add up.

She tried to work more, took on extra freelance projects, stayed up until 3:00 in the morning rendering 3D designs for clients who paid her $50 per room.

She stopped eating lunch, started skipping breakfast, drank coffee to keep the hunger away.

She lost weight.

Her clothes hung loose.

Her face looked hollow.

And through it all, one thought kept circling back.

Fahad, he could fix this with one transfer, one phone call.

He’d done it before.

She hated herself for thinking it, but the thought wouldn’t leave.

On November 12th, she broke.

She called him straight to voicemail.

She called again.

Voicemail.

She texted, “Please, I just need to talk to you.

” No response.

She waited an hour, then two, then six.

Nothing.

The next day, she went to his building.

It was raining.

Cold, heavy November rain that soaked through her jacket in minutes.

She walked past Eugene at the front desk.

He looked up, surprised to see her, but she kept walking straight to the elevator.

She still had the access fob, the one he’d told her to keep.

She swiped it.

The elevator doors opened.

Her heart was pounding as the numbers climbed.

The doors opened.

She walked down the hallway.

Her shoes squeaked on the polished floor.

Water dripped from her coat, leaving a trail behind her.

She reached his door, raised her hand, knocked.

Nothing.

She knocked again harder.

Fahad, I know you’re in there.

Silence.

She pulled out her phone, called him.

Inside the apartment, she heard his phone ring once, twice, then it stopped.

He declined the call.

Fahad, please just open the door.

Nothing.

She pressed her forehead against the door.

Her voice cracked.

I just need 5 minutes.

That’s all.

Please.

Still nothing.

She stood there for a long time, her breath fogging against the door, her whole body shaking.

Then she heard it, footsteps moving away from the door toward the back of the apartment.

He was there and he was walking away.

She pounded on the door with both fists.

Fad, don’t do this, please.

The footsteps stopped.

For a moment, she thought he might come back.

Might open the door.

But then she heard another sound, a door closing.

Somewhere deeper in the apartment.

He wasn’t coming.

She slid down to the floor, her back against his door, her knees pulled to her chest.

She sat there in the empty hallway crying, her wet hair stuck to her face.

Her phone buzzed.

A text from Fahad.

You need to leave.

I’m calling security if you don’t.

Her hands were shaking as she typed back.

My mom is in the hospital.

My visa is expiring.

I have nowhere to go.

Three dots appeared, then disappeared, then appeared again.

I’m sorry about your mother, but I can’t keep solving your problems.

You made me need you.

No, you made yourself dependent on me.

I gave you the tools.

Now you must stand alone.

She stared at the screen, her vision blurred.

I can’t.

You’re stronger than you think.

You’ll figure it out.

She looked up at the door, at the cold, impersonal wood between them.

Please don’t do this.

No response.

She called him.

It rang once, then went to voicemail.

She called again.

Same thing.

On the third call, it went straight to voicemail.

He’d turned his phone off.

She sat there for another 10 minutes, maybe 15, waiting for something, anything.

Then she heard the elevator ding at the end of the hall.

Eugene stepped out.

He looked uncomfortable, apologetic.

Miss Santos, I’m going to have to ask you to leave.

She looked up at him.

Her face blank, empty.

He called you? Eugene nodded.

I’m sorry, ma’am.

I don’t want to do this, but it’s okay.

She stood up slowly, her legs unsteady.

I’m going.

She walked past him, got into the elevator, pressed the button for the lobby.

As the doors closed, she saw Eugene standing in the hallway, watching her with something that looked like pity.

When she got to the lobby, she walked outside into the rain.

And then she just stood there on the sidewalk, the rain pouring down, her breath fogging in the cold November air.

She didn’t know how long she stood there.

Long enough that she stopped shivering.

Long enough that she stopped feeling the cold.

Her phone buzzed one last time.

A text from Fad.

Don’t come back here again.

She stared at the screen.

And somewhere between that text and the walk to the subway station, something inside Mari Santos didn’t just crack, it shattered.

That was the moment something inside her snapped.

November 14th, 2024.

10:52 p.

m.

Marisel stood outside Fad’s building one last time.

She hadn’t planned to come back.

After everything that happened two days ago, the closed door, the security guard, the final text, she’d told herself she was done.

But then her phone rang.

Her sister crying.

The hospital was threatening to discharge their mother if they didn’t pay the outstanding balance.

3 days, that’s all they had.

Marisel had transferred every dollar she had left.

It wasn’t enough.

She’d called her boss, asked for an advance.

He said the company couldn’t do that.

She’d applied for a payday loan online, denied.

Bad credit.

She’d looked at her bank account, $43.

And then she’d looked at the access fob sitting on her kitchen counter.

She told herself she was just going to talk to him one more time.

Make him understand.

Make him see what he’d done.

She swiped the fob.

The elevator doors opened.

When she reached his floor, she walked to his door and knocked.

Soft at first, then harder.

The door opened.

Fahad stood there in a white dress shirt, untucked, sleeves rolled up.

He had a glass of scotch in his hand.

He looked tired, irritated.

Maricel, I need to talk to you.

I told you not to come back here.

I know, but how did you even get up here? She held up the fob, his jaw tightened.

You were supposed to return that.

You told me to keep it.

That was before.

Before what? Before you decided I didn’t matter anymore.

He sighed, stepped aside.

5 minutes, then you leave.

She walked in.

The penthouse looked the same.

Cold, expensive, lifeless.

He closed the door behind her.

Didn’t offer her a seat.

Just stood there, arms crossed.

What do you want, Marisel? My mother is still in the hospital.

They’re going to discharge her if I don’t pay.

I need $300.

That’s it.

Just 300.

And you thought you’d come here and ask me for it? I didn’t know where else to go.

He set his glass down on the counter, looked at her like she was exhausting him.

I can’t keep doing this.

I’m not asking you to keep doing anything.

I’m asking for help one more time.

That’s all.

You said that last week because I thought you cared.

I did care.

I do care.

But that doesn’t mean I’m a bank.

Her voice cracked.

You said you’d help me.

I did help you.

I paid off $18,000 of debt.

I gave you opportunities.

I supported you.

And now you’re just cutting me off.

Yes, because this, he gestured between them, isn’t healthy for either of us.

You made me need you.

No, I helped you.

There’s a difference.

What you do with that help is up to you.

She felt something break inside her again.

Deeper this time.

You knew I had nothing.

You knew I was struggling.

And you used that.

I never used you.

Yes, you did.

You made me feel safe.

You made me think I mattered.

And the whole time I was just another name on your list.

His face hardened.

You need to leave.

No, Maricel.

I’m not leaving until you help me.

I’m not giving you money.

Then what was the point of any of this? Her voice was rising now, shaking.

What was I to you? Just something to pass the time.

Just another immigrant girl who was grateful enough to keep her mouth shut.

You’re being unfair.

Unfair? She laughed.

A bitter, broken sound.

You lied to me.

You made me believe this was real.

I never promised you forever.

You promised something.

I never promised anything.

The words hung in the air.

cold.

Final.

She stared at him, her chest heaving, her hands shaking.

You made me love you.

He looked away.

Don’t make this emotional.

That line, that one line, something inside her didn’t crack.

It shattered.

Don’t make this emotional.

Like her feelings were an inconvenience, a problem, something to be managed and discarded.

She stood there, silent, her whole body trembling.

Fad walked past her toward the living room, picked up his glass from the coffee table.

I’m going to bed.

Lock the door behind you when you leave.

He turned his back to her.

She looked at the counter at the neat row of injection pens he kept there.

Peptides for muscle recovery, growth hormone, anti-aging treatments, and insulin.

He used it occasionally for bodybuilding protocols.

Something about nutrient uptake she’d heard him mention once on a phone call.

She’d been in this apartment dozens of times.

She’d watched him use those pens, knew which was which.

Her hands moved before her mind caught up.

She picked up the insulin pen, the one with the highest concentration, the one he told her once was serious stuff.

You have to be careful with dosing.

She held it behind her back.

Fahad.

He turned annoyed.

What? She walked toward him, her face calm now.

Too calm.

I’m sorry for everything.

I just can I hug you goodbye.

Please.

He looked at her for a long moment.

Then his expression softened slightly.

Fine.

But then you need to go.

And I mean it this time.

She stepped into his arms.

wrapped hers around him, pressed her face against his chest.

He stood there stiffly, tolerating it.

With one hand behind his back, she uncapped the pen, found the soft spot just above his hip, where there was muscle, where an injection wouldn’t be immediately noticeable.

She pressed the pen against him through his shirt, pushed the plunger, full dose.

He flinched slightly, pulled back just a little.

“Your belt buckle is digging into me,” he said, adjusting his position.

She stepped back, capped the pen behind her back.

“Goodbye, Fad,” he nodded, already walking toward his bedroom.

“Good night, Marisel.

Please don’t come back here.

” She walked to the counter, wiped the pen clean, put it back exactly where it had been.

Then she left, walked down the hallway, got in the elevator, pressed the button for the lobby.

Her hands were shaking now, her whole body.

What had she done? She walked through the lobby.

Eugene looked up, waved.

She waved back out into the cold November air.

She got on the subway, sat down, stared at nothing.

By the time she got home, Fad would be lying on his couch, scrolling through his phone, finishing his scotch, maybe watching the news.

In 30 minutes, maybe 40, he’d start to feel off.

Tired, confused, his blood sugar dropping.

He might check his fitness tracker, notice something wrong, but by then his thinking would be fuzzy.

He’d lie down, close his eyes just for a minute, and he’d never wake up.

By morning, when his assistant arrived with coffee and found him lying peacefully on the couch, the glass of scotch still on the table, the world would believe Shik Fad al-Mansour had died in his sleep.

natural causes, a peaceful end,” she whispered into the empty subway car, her voice barely audible over the rattling tracks.

“I just wanted you to see me, but he never would.

” November 15th, 2024 7:12 a.

m.

The call came in as a routine death investigation.

Natural causes, no signs of foul play.

But Dr.

Lillian Foster at Mount Sinai Hospital Emergency Department wasn’t convinced.

She’d been an ER physician for 17 years.

She knew what natural death looked like.

And Shik Fad al-Mansour, 47 years old, wealthy, no significant medical history, didn’t fit the profile.

The paramedics had brought him in already deceased.

Time of death estimated around 2:00 a.

m.

based on body temperature and rigor mortise.

They’d found him on his couch lying peacefully like he’d fallen asleep watching television.

But when Dr.

Foster reviewed the preliminary blood work, something stood out.

His glucose level was 23 mg per deciliter.

Normal range is 70 to 100.

Anything below 55 is considered dangerously low.

23 was incompatible with life.

She ordered an expanded toxicology panel.

Specifically, she tested for ceptide levels, a marker that distinguishes between naturally produced insulin and externally administered insulin.

The results came back 6 hours later.

Elevated insulin, suppressed ceptide, meaning the insulin in his system didn’t come from his own pancreas.

It came from an injection.

Dr.

Foster picked up the phone and called the NYPD.

By 3:00 p.

m.

, Detective Maria Johnson was standing in the penthouse where Fahad al-Mansour had died.

Maria was 42, 12 years with the NYPD, eight in homicide.

She’d worked everything from domestic disputes turned fatal to organized crime hits.

But this case felt different.

The apartment was pristine.

No signs of struggle, no forced entry.

The door had been locked from the inside when the assistant arrived that morning.

Maria walked through slowly, taking it all in.

The glass of scotch on the coffee table still had liquid in it.

No fingerprints except fahads.

the injection pens on the bathroom counter.

Peptides, growth hormone, insulin.

She picked up the insulin pen, nearly full, but not completely full.

Bag this, she said to the forensics tech.

I want it tested for prints and residue.

Her partner, Detective Kevin Brennan, was going through Fad’s phone records in the study.

Maria, you need to see this.

She walked over.

He had the building’s security footage pulled up on a laptop.

Watch this.

November 14th, 10:47 p.

m.

The footage showed the lobby.

A woman entering, dark hair, mid30s.

She walked to the elevator with purpose, swiped an access fob.

Who is she? Don’t know yet, but look at this.

He clicked to another timestamp.

11:34 p.

m.

Same woman leaving.

Maria leaned closer.

The woman’s face was clearer in this shot.

She looked calm, tired, but calm.

Run facial recognition.

Check the building’s access logs.

I want to know who she is and why she had access to this apartment.

Within an hour, they had a name.

Marisel Santos, 34 years old, Filipina National.

Work visa.

Listed occupation: interior designer at Lux Interiors.

Maria pulled her employment records.

Marisel had worked on Fad’s penthouse renovation 18 months ago.

Why does an interior designer still have building access a year and a half later? Kevin asked.

Good question.

Maria requested Fad’s financial records.

It took a court order and three phone calls to his bank in Dubai, but by evening she had them.

What she found told a story.

Regular transfers to Marisel Santos ranging from Tuan to Forthart going back 14 months.

Rent payments, utility bills, a one-time payment of $18,000 in June 2023.

And then abruptly, the payment stopped.

October 28th, 2024.

Last transfer, $2,800.

Maria cross referenced the dates with Marisel’s phone records.

Another court order.

Another 3 hours of waiting.

Text messages.

Dozens of them.

October 30th.

Please, I just need to talk to you.

November 1st, you said you’d help me.

November 12th, my mom is in the hospital.

My visa is expiring.

I have nowhere to go.

November 13th.

Please don’t do this.

And then on November 14th, at 10:51 p.

m.

, 1 minute before the security footage showed her entering the building, she’d sent one final text.

I’m coming over.

No response from Fad.

Maria sat back in her chair, looked at Kevin.

We need to bring her in.

But before they could, another complication arrived.

The Emirates consulate called, then the State Department.

Then someone from the Dubai Royal Court.

Shik Fahad al-Mansour wasn’t just wealthy.

He was connected.

His family had ties to the UAE government.

His death was now an international incident.

The pressure to solve this case quickly and quietly was immense.

On November 16th, Fad’s wife arrived from Dubai.

Amamira al-Mansour was 51.

Elegant, composed.

She wore a black abaya and carried herself with the kind of dignity that comes from years of practice.

Maria met her at the precinct, offered condolences, asked routine questions.

Mrs.

Al-Mansour, were you aware your husband was in New York? He traveled frequently for business.

I knew he kept an apartment here.

When was the last time you spoke to him? 3 days before he died.

He called to check on our daughters.

Did he mention anything unusual? Anyone he was concerned about? Amira’s expression didn’t change.

My husband kept his business affairs private.

Maria chose her words carefully.

We found evidence that he was supporting someone financially, a woman named Marisel Santos.

Were you aware of this? For the first time, something flickered across Amamira’s face.

Not shock, not anger, something closer to resignation.

I was aware my husband had arrangements.

We had an understanding.

An understanding.

Detective Johnson, I’ve been married for 22 years.

I’m not naive.

Maria nodded slowly.

Did you know her name? No.

And I didn’t want to.

Amamira stood, looked Maria directly in the eye.

My husband was a good father, a generous man, but he was also selfish.

He took what he wanted and gave what was convenient.

I accepted that a long time ago.

She paused at the door.

I hope you find whoever did this, but I also hope you understand.

My husband created his own circumstances.

After she left, Maria sat at her desk, staring at the case file.

Everything pointed to Maurice Santos.

Motive: financial desperation, emotional betrayal, opportunity, building access, alone with the victim on the night he died.

Means knowledge of his insulin supply, ability to administer the injection.

The evidence was overwhelming.

But something bothered Maria.

She pulled up Marisel’s background.

Born in Manila, came to the US at 28.

Worked three jobs to support her family.

Sent money home Everpool every month.

No criminal record, not even a parking ticket.

Maria thought about her own life 20 years ago.

working two jobs to put herself through college, sending money to her mother in Chicago, dating a man who promised to help her, to support her, to make things easier until he didn’t.

She’d survived barely.

But she’d had options.

Marisel didn’t.

She was a citizen.

She had family nearby.

She spoke English without an accent.

Marisel had none of that.

Maria closed the file.

Looked at Kevin.

Let’s bring her in but carefully.

I want to hear her side of this because everything pointed to Marisel Santos.

Everything except the question that kept nagging at Maria.

What happens to a woman when the world tells her she’s worthless and the one person who made her feel seen suddenly erases her? What does desperation look like when it has nowhere left to go? Everything pointed to Mary Cell, but Maria had a feeling her story was going to be more complicated than the evidence suggested.

November 17th, 2024, 9:15 a.

m.

Mara Santos sat in interview room 3 at the Manhattan South Precinct.

She’d been there for 20 minutes.

Hadn’t asked for a lawyer.

Hadn’t asked for anything.

Just sat there, hands folded on the table, staring at nothing.

Detective Maria Johnson walked in with a folder, set it down, sat across from her.

Miss Santos, I’m Detective Maria Johnson.

Thank you for coming in.

Marisel looked up.

Her face was pale, exhausted, like she hadn’t slept in days.

Did I have a choice? You did.

You could have asked for an attorney.

What’s the point? Maria studied her for a moment, then opened the folder.

I want to show you something.

She laid out a printed screenshot.

Security footage.

Timestamp.

November 14th, 10:47 p.

m.

That’s you entering Shik Fad al-Mansour’s building the night he died.

Marisel looked at it, nodded slowly.

Yes.

And this another photo.

You leaving? 11:34 p.

m.

Yes.

Maria pulled out another document.

Phone records.

Your phone shows multiple calls and texts to Fad’s number in the weeks leading up to his death, including one message sent at 10:51 p.

m.

on November 14th.

I’m coming over.

Did you send that? Yes.

What happened when you got there? Marisel’s hands tightened on the table.

We talked about what? I asked him for help.

He said no.

Maria leaned forward slightly.

Help with what? My mother was in the hospital.

My visa was expiring.

My rent was going up.

I needed $300.

That’s all.

Just $30.

And he refused.

He said he’d already done enough that I needed to stand on my own.

Maria pulled out financial records, highlighted transactions.

He’d been supporting you financially for over a year, monthly payments, rent, utilities.

He paid off your student loans, $18,000 in one transfer.

Marisel’s eyes filled with tears.

I know.

And then the payment stopped.

October 28th, two weeks before he died.

He was leaving, going back to Dubai.

Closing the apartment, ending everything.

Everything meaning your relationship.

Marisel looked away.

It wasn’t a relationship.

It was I don’t know what it was.

Maria set down another document.

Search history from Marisel’s laptop.

Pulled from a warrant executed that morning.

November 12th.

You searched insulin overdose symptoms.

November 13th.

How long does insulin take to work? Insulin poisoning death.

Marisel’s breath caught.

Her hands started shaking.

November 14th.

The day he died.

You searched how much insulin is lethal.

Silence.

Maria’s voice was calm.

Not accusatory, just factual.

Maricel.

Fad al-Mansour died from insulin poisoning.

Toxicology confirmed it.

Someone injected him with a lethal dose.

And based on the timeline, you were the last person to see him alive.

Marisel closed her eyes.

Tears ran down her face.

I didn’t mean for him to die.

Maria waited.

I just wanted him to feel it.

what I was feeling, the panic, the fear.

I wanted him scared.

I wanted him to understand what it’s like when everything is falling apart and the person who promised to help you just walks away.

So, you injected him with insulin.

I didn’t think it would kill him.

I thought he’d feel sick, that he’d call for help, that someone would come.

I thought her voice broke.

I thought he’d realize how serious it was, how desperate I was.

But he didn’t call for help.

I don’t know.

I left.

I just left.

Maria pulled out deleted text messages.

Recovered from Marisel’s phone.

You sent him a message after you left.

11:42 p.

m.

I’m sorry.

You deleted it 30 seconds later.

Marisel covered her face with her hands.

I didn’t want him dead.

I swear I didn’t want him dead.

I just wanted him to see me, to stop pretending I didn’t matter.

Her whole body was shaking now.

The tears coming harder.

He made me love him.

He made me need him.

And then he threw me away like I was nothing.

Like all those months meant nothing.

Like I was just disposable.

Maria watched her, saw a woman who’d been broken piece by piece, not by one act, but by a thousand small cruelties.

“He told me not to make it emotional,” Marisel whispered.

Like my feelings were an inconvenience, like I was supposed to just accept it and move on.

She looked up at Maria, her face raw, devastated.

“Do you know what it’s like to be invisible? to work yourself to death, to sacrifice everything and still feel like you don’t matter.

And then someone comes along and makes you feel seen and valued and important.

And then they take it all away.

Maria’s expression softened.

I do know.

Marisel wiped her face.

I didn’t want to hurt him.

I just wanted him to feel something.

Anything.

I wanted him to understand that I wasn’t just some girl he could use and forget.

But he died.

Marisel, I know.

Her voice was barely audible.

I know.

She put her head down on the table, her shoulders shaking, sobbing.

Maria sat there, watching, feeling the weight of it.

The tragedy of a woman who’d been pushed so far past her breaking point that she couldn’t see any other way out.

After a long moment, Maria spoke quietly.

Maraic El Santos, I’m placing you under arrest for the murder of Fad al-Mansour.

You have the right to remain silent.

Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law.

Maricel didn’t resist, didn’t protest, just sat there crying as Maria read her rights.

When Maria finished, Marisel looked up, her face destroyed.

Will they understand when this goes to trial? Will anyone understand why I did it? Maria’s jaw tightened.

I don’t know.

He made me this way.

He made me desperate.

And then he blamed me for it.

Maria stood, signaled for the uniformed officers waiting outside.

That may be true, but he’s dead.

and you’re the one who killed him.

As the officers led Marisel out of the room, Maria stayed behind, stared at the evidence spread across the table.

The photos, the records, the searches, the timeline, everything told the same story.

A woman pushed to the edge.

A man who didn’t see the danger until it was too late.

Confession brings truth, but not forgiveness.

March 18th, 2025, four months after Fad Al-Mansour’s death, Marisel Santos stood in a Manhattan courtroom for sentencing.

She’d pleaded guilty to seconddegree murder.

Her attorney had argued for manslaughter, citing extreme emotional disturbance.

The prosecution pushed for the maximum sentence, calling it premeditated and calculated.

The judge settled somewhere in between.

18 years to life.

Marisel didn’t react when the sentence was read.

She just stood there, her hands folded in front of her, her face blank like she’d already left her body long before the gavvel came down.

Her public defender touched her arm, said something.

She nodded, and then she was led away.

That evening from a detention facility in Brooklyn, Marisel made a video call home.

Her mother answered, thinner than before, weaker.

Her sister was there too, holding the phone.

Her brother sat in the background, looking at the floor.

A knock.

Her mother whispered.

What will happen to you? Marisel tried to smile.

Failed.

I’ll be okay, mama.

18 years.

I know.

Her sister was crying.

We can’t lose you.

Not like this.

You’re not losing me.

I’m still here.

But they all knew the truth.

Marisel Santos, the daughter who’d sacrificed everything, who’d sent money every month, who’d carried the weight of an entire family on her shoulders, was gone.

Her mother reached toward the screen, her hand trembling.

I’m so sorry, Anak.

This is my fault.

if I hadn’t gotten sick.

No, mama, don’t say that.

This was never your fault.

But her mother was sobbing now.

Her sister, too.

The call ended with all of them crying, unable to say the things they really meant.

I love you.

I’m sorry.

Goodbye.

Fad’s body had been flown back to Dubai within 72 hours of his death.

According to Islamic custom, he was buried quickly, surrounded by family and hundreds of mourers who remembered him as generous, successful, devoted.

But 6 weeks later, a small memorial gathering was held at a hotel in Manhattan.

His New York business associates, the developers, the investors, the lawyers who’d worked with him for years, wanted a chance to pay their respects.

Amamira attended with her three daughters.

They sat quietly in the back, dressed in black, accepting condolences from people who spoke carefully about her husband’s vision and impact.

Detective Maria Johnson stood near the entrance, watching.

When the crowd thinned, she approached.

Mrs.

Almensour, I’m sorry for your loss.

Amira looked at her, nodded once.

Thank you, detective.

They stood in silence for a moment.

Then Amamira spoke, her voice low.

Did she say why she did it? Maria chose her words carefully.

She said she wanted him to see her, to understand what she was going through.

Amamira’s expression didn’t change, but something flickered in her eyes.

He never saw anyone.

Not really.

Not me.

not his daughters.

Certainly not her.

She looked toward the doorway where her daughters were waiting.

My husband was a good provider, a respected man.

But he was also a coward.

He avoided conflict.

He avoided responsibility.

He avoided anything that required him to be emotionally present.

She turned back to Maria.

He failed us.

All of us.

But she Amamira paused.

She never had a chance.

Maria watched as Amamira walked away, her daughters surrounding her, their grief private and dignified.

Back at the precinct, Maria closed the case file on Fad al-Mansour.

The evidence had been overwhelming.

The confession clear.

Justice and the legal sense had been served, but Maria couldn’t shake the feeling that something had been lost in the process.

something that couldn’t be measured in evidence or testimony.

She thought about Marisel, about the desperation that had driven her to that penthouse, about the moment when survival instinct turned into something darker.

She thought about Fad, about a man who’d had every advantage, every opportunity, and still managed to destroy the people around him through sheer emotional negligence.

And she thought about all the women like Marisel, the ones working three jobs, the ones sending money home, the ones holding their families together with nothing but will and hope it scores.

The ones who feel invisible.

Maria put the file in the drawer, locked it.

Some cases stayed with you.

This was one of them.

That night, the penthouse on East 57th Street sat empty.

The furniture was still there, the expensive art on the walls, the injection pen still lined up on the bathroom counter, but the lights were off.

The air was still through the floor to ceiling windows.

The city stretched out in all directions.

Millions of lives, millions of stories, most of them invisible to everyone but the people living them.

Somewhere out there, a woman was working a night shift to pay her mother’s medical bills.

Somewhere, an a man was making promises he had no intention of keeping.

Somewhere, someone was reaching their breaking point.

The city didn’t care.

It never did.

It just kept moving.

Kept swallowing people whole.

Kept turning tragedies into statistics.

Some crimes are born from anger, some from envy.

But the ones that stay with us, the ones that force us to look away because they’re too uncomfortable, are born from the quiet suffering of people who feel invisible, people who gave everything.

And still, it wasn’t enough.

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Now, I want to hear from you.

Was Marisel a victim who became a killer? Or was she always responsible for her own choices? Where does desperation end and accountability begin? Drop your thoughts in the comments.