The morning sun in the San Fernando Valley doesn’t just rise; it interrogates. It bleeds through the custom UV-filtered windows of a $6.5 million Encino estate, casting long, unforgiving shadows across acres of imported Italian marble.
For a woman whose entire existence is meticulously curated for the uncompromising lenses of Bravo’s camera crews, light is usually a friend. It smooths the edges. It makes the flawless diamonds catch fire. But lately, the morning light just feels like a spotlight she can’t escape.
Dorit stood in the center of her cavernous walk-in closet, a room that rivaled the square footage of most middle-class American homes. The air in here always smelled exactly the same: an intoxicating, expensive blend of fresh leather, dry-cleaned silk, and the faint, lingering ghost of Baccarat Rouge.
This was her sanctuary. This was the one place where the volume of the outside world could be dialed down to a whisper.
But today, the silence was deafening.
Somewhere in the sprawling house beneath her, a stack of mail sat unopened on a monolithic kitchen island. She didn’t need to slice open the heavy, formal envelopes to know what was inside. The numbers had been burned into the back of her eyelids for months.
$842,000.
It wasn’t just a number anymore. It was a living, breathing entity in the house. It sat next to her at dinner parties. It rode shotgun in the Range Rover.
It was a suffocating, heavy blanket that draped over her shoulders every time the red light on a television camera blinked alive. Eight hundred and forty-two thousand dollars in debt to lenders. It was the kind of money that didn’t just dent a bank account; it detonated a life.
She reached out and ran her manicured fingers over the buttery quilted leather of a limited-edition Chanel flap bag. It was flawless. Perfect stitching, gleaming hardware. She remembered the day she bought it.
The rush of walking into the boutique on Rodeo Drive, the obsequious smiles of the sales associates, the heavy, satisfying clink of the champagne flute on the glass counter. For exactly forty-five minutes that day, she hadn’t felt the panic. When she handed over the platinum card, the transaction wasn’t just a purchase; it was an anesthetic.
They called it a “potential shopping addiction” in the hushed, breathless gossip columns that fueled her industry. Potential. The word was almost laughable. There was nothing potential about the dopamine hit that came with a fresh designer box.