“You’re right, Marcus,” I said softly. “Let’s not drag this out.” I signed every page. Vanessa actually clapped. Marcus looked stunned for a half-second, then triumphant. “Smart girl. I’ll have movers here Monday.” I capped the pen, slid the folder back, and walked to the drawer by the fridge. Not for a knife. For a different envelope. Cream-colored. Law firm letterhead. I placed it on top of his divorce papers. “Before you celebrate, you should read this.” He frowned, opened it, and the color drained from his face so fast Vanessa actually took a step back. “What… what is this?” “That,” I said, wiping flour from my hands, “is the forensic accounting report my attorney commissioned eight months ago. The day I found Vanessa’s earring in your car.” His mouth opened. Nothing came out. “You see, Marcus, when you made me ‘just the wife’ and put the company in my name for that tax loophole in 2011, you forgot something. You forgot to take it out. I own seventy-one percent of Hargrove Construction. I have for thirteen years.” Vanessa’s smirk slid off her face like wet paint. “And the Cayman account you’ve been funneling money into to hide from me? My attorney filed the fraud report this morning. The IRS opens their investigation Tuesday.” Marcus gripped the counter. “Eleanor, wait—we can talk—” “We did talk. You called me a charity case last Thanksgiving in front of my mother. You told Vanessa I was ‘decorative.’ I recorded it. All of it.” I picked up the cake and turned toward the door. Our daughter Lily was waiting at her dorm. “Oh, and Vanessa?” I added without looking back. “That robe is vintage Dior. Forty-two hundred dollars. Keep it. Consider it severance.” I walked out into the sunshine, the cake still warm in my hands, and for the first time in twenty years, the silence behind me sounded exactly like freedom.
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