A lot of people were genuinely sorry for her.
Bunny: Is everyone's moral compass broken? While you're crying over Maeve "losing her future," did you forget she killed someone?
Durian Lover: People don't follow principles anymore, they follow a pretty face. When a beautiful woman's involved, the "bottom line" is just air.
Dreamer: Honest question—did Maeve actually kill anyone?
Cat Hugger: That clip had no context. It proves nothing. If she really murdered someone, why hasn't she been punished by law?
Drifter: Agree. Maybe the video's fake. And if it is, the Morales family is pure evil.
This time nobody even needed to stir the pot—people went right back to ripping the Moraleses apart.
Not long after, Elaine reposted Renfield's announcement on her own page.
Caption: Karma always comes.
Elaine used to be a popular lifestyle influencer. But once the internet found proof she'd stolen her best friend's boyfriend, her carefully crafted "classy intellectual beauty" image collapsed overnight.
Even her loyal followers were disgusted. They unfollowed in droves—leaving nasty comments on their way out.
With her reputation in free fall, brands pulled their sponsorships. And her artwork got boycotted so hard it was obvious she wouldn't be making money from it again anytime soon.
Even worse, the man she'd stolen didn't just get labeled a cheater—online sleuths dug up where he worked, and his company got dragged into the storm.
The boss didn't want the business associated with scandal, so he handed the guy a termination letter.
Now the two of them spent their days at home screaming at each other. That honeymoon sweetness had vanished like it had never existed.
Elaine's life was miserable—and she hated it.

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