By dawn, I had hired a private investigator—Gerald Lawrence, a man who’d worked with me on cases when I needed information beyond subpoenas. By noon, he had preliminary traces: name variations, prior addresses, and a pattern that made my stomach harden.
Vanessa Morales wasn’t just Vanessa Morales.
She was Vanessa Christine Gutierrez, with three previous engagements that ended weeks before the wedding date.
Each with “deposit issues.” Each with “vendor drama.” Each with men who lost hundreds of thousands and decided not to prosecute because they wanted their lives back.
Gerald’s voice on the phone was calm, but I heard the grim satisfaction in it.
“They’re professionals,” he said.
“Then they’ve been making mistakes for a long time,” I replied.
I gave Vanessa seventy-two hours for documentation not because I wanted proof—Kevin’s note was proof enough—but because I wanted to see how she reacted under pressure. A scammer can’t resist trying to regain control.
And when she tried, she’d slip.
On hour seventy-one, Vanessa sent a text to Kevin: Verbal agreements are standard in luxury events. Detailed contracts come after deposits. You trust me, don’t you?
I screenshotted it.