I picked up the letter. My voice didn’t shake. “Effective immediately, Emma Hollister is terminated for gross financial misconduct.” I set it down gently. “Gerald, before I sign, may I share something with the board?” He waved a lazy hand, already celebrating. I opened the leather folder in front of me. “Six months ago, I noticed nine million dollars moving through a shell account in the Caymans. I traced every wire. Every signature. Every approval.” The room went still. I slid twelve identical folders down the table. “Page four. Those are Gerald’s initials. Page seven, Marcus’s. Page eleven, the offshore account in Gerald’s mistress’s name.” Marcus’s head snapped up so fast I heard his neck crack. Gerald’s smile finally slipped. “You little—” “I also,” I continued softly, “filed a whistleblower report with the SEC yesterday morning at 8:47 a.m. As of two hours ago, the federal reward is thirty percent of recovered funds. That’s roughly two point seven million dollars. To me.” One board member stood up and quietly walked out. Then another. Gerald lunged for the folder. “Emma, wait, we can discuss—” “And Marcus,” I said, turning to my husband, “the prenup you made me sign? It voids on proven infidelity. The private investigator’s photos of you and Chloe from accounting are in folder thirteen. That one’s just for you, sweetheart.” Marcus went the color of old milk. I stood up, smoothed my mother’s blazer, and picked up my bag. At the door I turned back. “Oh, Gerald? You told me to read every line. I skipped the last one.” I held up the letter. “‘We wish you the best in your future endeavors.'” I smiled for the first time in six years. “I already have them. Enjoy the auditors. They arrive at nine.” The door clicked shut behind me, and for the first time since I’d married into that family, I could breathe.
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