Part 1
Jennifer stopped breathing. Her heavily made-up eyes widened in disbelief, and the paper trembled in her hands as her breath came out uneven and broken.
“This is a joke,” she whispered.
But her voice had lost all its confidence. It sounded thin now. Fragile. Almost childish. I did not blink.
“Accountants don’t make jokes, Jennifer.”
I turned the page slowly, giving every person in that ballroom enough time to feel the weight of what was coming.
“And neither do notaries.”
Then I looked at Lucas. My son. My blood. The man who had stood by and watched his mother be humiliated in front of hundreds of people. He stepped forward and nearly ripped the document from Jennifer’s hands. His eyes darted across the bold highlighted lines. Within seconds, every bit of color drained from his face. The glowing groom became a corpse in a tuxedo.
“Dad…” he stammered. “What does this mean?”
“It means the game is over, Lucas.”
I pointed to the first paragraph.
“The Manhattan loft where the two of you live?”
Then I looked straight at Jennifer.
“The lease is in my name. I terminated it this morning.”
Jennifer opened her mouth, but nothing came out.
“You have until Monday at eight o’clock to leave.”
Lucas shook his head wildly.
“But the company. Dad, my investment company.”
He clutched the paper like it was the only thing keeping him alive.
“You gave me the startup capital. You gave it to me.”
“No,” I said coldly. “I loaned it to you.”
The reception room fell completely silent. Four hundred guests sat listening as my son’s empire began to collapse in public.
“I invested two million dollars as a demand loan,” I said. “Repayable whenever I request it.”
I pulled a pen from my pocket and tapped the clause marked 4.B.
“And I am requesting full repayment tonight.”
Lucas’s knees nearly gave out. He stumbled backward and caught himself against the DJ booth.
“I’m ruined,” he whispered. “I don’t have that kind of money.”
I turned to Jennifer. Her panic shifted into rage. Her fists clenched at her sides.
“You can’t do this to us!” she screamed into the still-active microphone. “This is our wedding. We’re family!”
I stared at her with ice in my eyes. Then I bent down, picked up Mary’s wig from the floor, and held it up in front of Jennifer’s face.
“You lost the right to use that word three minutes ago.”