She pointed down the list.
Food.
Alcohol.
Private suite.
Entertainment.
Luxury services.
Attempted jewelry purchase.
Then she smiled slightly.
“The necklace never left the boutique.”
“At least there’s that.”
“There’s more.”
She slid a form toward me.
My stomach dropped.
There it was.
My company name.
Below it…
A shaky attempt at my signature.
Michael hadn’t even bothered making it convincing.
He assumed nobody would question it because he had once been my husband.
Teresa tapped the page.
“This may qualify as forgery and unauthorized use of financial instruments.”
“What about Vanessa?”
Teresa almost laughed.
“She posted half the evidence herself.”
Videos.
Photos.
Receipts.
Champagne toasts.
The sapphire necklace.
Every humiliating detail.
Vanessa had documented Michael’s crime for us.
By noon, Michael was escorted off the property after accusing me of being crazy, accusing the receptionist of disrespect, and informing a delivery driver that successful women were dangerous.
Lupita texted me.
He forgot the cameras record audio.
I replied:
Save everything.
That afternoon, Teresa filed emergency motions with the court.
The bank confirmed every card had been restricted before the attempted charges.
The club submitted security footage.
My father built a timeline so detailed it could have been used in a federal investigation.
But the biggest surprise came at 3:18 p.m.
Vanessa called.
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I answered only because Teresa was sitting beside me.
“Mariana?”
Her voice sounded different.
Not smug.
Scared.
“What do you want?”
“Michael says you did something illegal.”
I almost laughed.
“Michael says a lot of things.”
“He told me the cards were included in the divorce agreement.”
“They weren’t.”
“He said you agreed to cover one final expense.”
I closed my eyes.
Of course.
He had lied to her too.
“Did he also tell you he could sign my name?”
Silence.
“He said married people sign things for each other all the time.”
“We were divorced that morning.”
Another silence.
Then Vanessa whispered:
“There’s something else.”
Teresa stopped writing.
I sat upright.
“What?”
“He said if you paid even one charge after the divorce, his lawyer could use it to reopen financial claims.”
The room went still.
My father slowly lifted his head.
“What did you just say?”
Vanessa repeated it.
And suddenly everything made sense.
The luxury dinner.
The extravagant spending.
The pressure.
The threats.
It was never about impressing Vanessa.
It was a trap.
If I approved even one charge, Michael planned to argue that financial ties still existed between us.
That company assets were still intertwined.
That I had hidden money.
He wasn’t angry.
He was hunting.
And because he was arrogant, he got careless.
That same afternoon Vanessa forwarded screenshots.
One message from Michael read:
As long as Mariana pays something after the divorce, my attorney can use it.
My father stared at the screen.
Then shook his head.
“That’s why I told you to change those PINs.”
He looked at me.
“This guy wasn’t heartbroken.”
“He was setting bait.”
The next morning, my ex-husband showed up at the headquarters of my interior design firm in downtown Chicago wearing sunglasses even though it was raining.
My receptionist, Linda, called me immediately.
“Mariana, Mauricio is downstairs. He says it’s an emergency.”
I looked out the floor-to-ceiling windows of my office on the twenty-eighth floor.
“Do not let him upstairs,” I said. “Call security.”
Linda lowered her voice.
“He’s already yelling.”
Of course he was.
For years, Mauricio had treated every boundary like it was merely a suggestion. When we first met, he was charming, polished, and ambitious. I thought he admired my work ethic.
Eventually I realized he admired something else entirely.
My clients.
My connections.
My company.
My access.
I activated the lobby intercom.
“Mauricio, leave the building.”
He looked directly at the security camera.
“Mariana, stop being ridiculous. We need to talk.”
“We have nothing to discuss.”
“You froze the cards.”
“I protected accounts that belong to me.”
“You ruined my reputation!”
“You tried to spend nearly a million dollars through my company five hours after our divorce.”
The entire lobby went silent.