Daniel pulled me into the hallway, away from the eyes of the guests.
“Are you insane?” he hissed. “Do you know who her father is?”
“Yes,” I said. “A contractor who built half the city with government money and missing safety reports.”
His face went pale.
Elena followed us, her heels clicking like gunshots. “You pathetic little housewife. You think gossip can hurt us?”
I turned toward her. “No. Paperwork can.”
She blinked.
Daniel forced out a laugh. “Claire doesn’t know anything. She doesn’t even understand my company accounts.”
That was his greatest mistake.
He had confused silence with ignorance.
For seven years, I had worked as the unpaid mind behind his empire. I reviewed contracts when he was drunk, corrected projections when he was reckless, and cleaned up numbers when his board started asking questions. Before our marriage, I had been a forensic accountant. Daniel called it “boring little calculator work.”
Boring little calculator work was about to bury him.
Elena crossed her arms. “Daniel said the divorce papers are ready. You get the house, maybe some allowance, and then you disappear.”
I almost admired her confidence.
“The divorce papers he prepared?” I asked. “The ones hiding offshore assets? The ones claiming his company is nearly bankrupt while he secretly moved twelve million dollars through your father’s shell vendors?”
Daniel’s breath stopped.
Elena whispered, “You told her?”
“No,” I said. “Your emails did.”
Her face drained.
From the ballroom, Carlo Moretti stormed toward us with two security guards.
“Get this woman out of my house,” he ordered.
I opened my clutch and took out a thin black drive.
“Before you do that,” I said, “you should know every guest in that room just received a scheduled email from me.”
Daniel lunged, but I stepped back.
His hand froze inches from my face.
A camera above the hallway blinked red.
I smiled. “Still recording.”
Carlo stared at the drive. “What is that?”
“Copies of invoices, fake inspections, bribery ledgers, bank transfers, and messages between your daughter and my husband planning to bankrupt me before filing for divorce.”
Elena’s lips trembled. “You’re lying.”
“Then you’ll enjoy proving that to the prosecutor.”
At that exact moment, phones began buzzing inside the ballroom.
One by one.
Then all at once.
A wave of murmurs rose behind us.
Daniel glanced over his shoulder and saw his investors, clients, and friends reading the same files he had hidden from me.
His mask cracked.
“You don’t understand what you’ve done,” he said.
I leaned close.
“No, Daniel. You don’t understand who you married.”