I picked up the folder, calm as still water. “Before I sign, Marcus, you should know something.” I slid my phone across the counter. On the screen: a wire transfer confirmation dated that morning. Forty-two million dollars, moved from Sterling Holdings LLC into an irrevocable trust. Marcus’s smirk cracked. “Sterling Holdings is MY company,” he said. “No,” I answered softly. “Sterling Holdings was my father’s company. You were listed as CEO because Daddy trusted my judgment. But I was always the sole shareholder. Check your email.” His phone buzzed. Brielle leaned over his shoulder and her wineglass slipped, red splashing across her white dress like an omen. Termination notice. Effective immediately. Escorted-from-the-building clause activated. “You can’t do this,” Marcus whispered. “I already did. At 9 a.m. And the penthouse? Owned by the trust. You have four hours to vacate.” I turned to Brielle, who had gone the color of skim milk. “Sweetheart, the necklace you’re wearing belonged to my mother. Put it on the counter before you leave, or my attorney adds grand larceny to the list.” She clawed it off so fast she scratched her own neck. Marcus lunged for the folder. “Elena, please, we can talk—” I slid it back toward him, open now, revealing not divorce papers but a second document: a forensic audit of the three offshore accounts he’d opened in my name to hide his gambling debts. “I already talked. To the IRS. To the SEC. And to your father, who cried when he saw the photos of you and Brielle at his lake house last Easter.” The doorbell rang. Two federal agents. Polite. Patient. I signed nothing that night except a statement. As they walked Marcus out, I poured the rest of the Chardonnay down the drain, opened the window, and finally, for the first time in six years, breathed.
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