He leaned forward, squinting at the page like the ink might rearrange itself if he stared hard enough. “That’s not—” he started, then stopped, because the signature was unmistakably his. The courtroom that had been leaning with him moments earlier now leaned away in real time, like a tide changing direction. Vanessa shifted in her seat for the first time, her polished smile tightening at the edges. Judge Whitmore didn’t react to the tension; she simply turned the page, calm and precise. “And these transfers?” she asked. “Seventy-two thousand dollars from a premarital account, deposited directly into Carter Custom Homes LLC during its formation period?” I could feel Daniel’s gaze on me now, not amused, not dismissive—calculating, searching for the version of me he had always filed under “manageable.” But I wasn’t that version anymore. I had been the woman balancing receipts at kitchen tables while he was building a narrative that erased me.
I looked at him then, really looked at him, and for the first time in fifteen years, I didn’t soften the truth to make it easier to swallow. “You told the court I don’t have a job,” I said quietly. “You were right. I didn’t. I was your bookkeeper, your investor, your compliance department, and your starting capital.” A murmur moved through the room. The judge held up a hand, and it died instantly. I slid the final document forward. “And according to this agreement you signed before the company ever turned a profit, that makes me a twenty-five percent owner—plus repayment rights on the original investment.” Daniel’s face went pale in a way no amount of money could disguise. For the first time, he wasn’t looking at a housewife in a cream blouse. He was looking at the ledger he had spent years forgetting existed—and realizing, too late, that it had been keeping track of everything.