“Vale Capital Holdings has been under financial stress for at least eighteen months,” Mara said. “Adrian has used marital assets to secure business lines of credit. Some of those assets were not his to pledge.”
My father’s face did not change.
But I knew him well enough to see it.
Anger had arrived. It had merely chosen a chair.
“Which assets?” he asked.
Mara looked at him. “The Lakeshore property. Two brokerage accounts. And one trust distribution belonging solely to Evelyn.”
The room tilted.
“My trust?” I said.
My mother crossed to my bed. “He accessed it?”
“He tried to classify part of it as joint liquidity through a bank officer at Meridian Private,” Mara said. “The attempt appears to have been rejected initially. Then approved three weeks later by a different officer.”
“My God,” I breathed.
Mara did not soften. “There is more.”
Of course there was.
Cruel men rarely stopped at one crime when the first one worked.
“Celeste Monroe is not merely his mistress,” Mara said. “She is listed as a consultant for Vale Capital. Over the last year, she received payments totaling approximately eight hundred and seventy thousand dollars.”
My mother’s eyes narrowed. “For what services?”
“Brand development. Investor relations. Executive lifestyle advisory.”
My father laughed once.
It was the coldest sound I had ever heard from him.
“She advised him into insolvency,” he said.
Mara tapped the tablet again. A photograph appeared.
Celeste stepping out of a boutique with shopping bags. Adrian’s hand at her back. That black Birkin on her arm.
“The bag?” I asked before I could stop myself.
Mara glanced at the image. “Purchased three days ago using Vale Capital’s corporate card.”
I closed my eyes.
I had been lying in a hospital bed, bringing his sons into the world, while he bought his mistress a trophy with stolen money.
My mother’s hand found mine.
“Evelyn,” she said quietly. “Look at me.”
I opened my eyes.
“You are not weak because this hurt you,” she said. “You are only dangerous because you survived it.”
The first petition was filed before I was discharged.
Emergency injunction.
Freeze on property transfers.
Freeze on accounts connected to marital assets.
Temporary custody order.
Restraining order preventing Adrian from removing the children from my care or entering the hospital wing.
Mara moved like a storm in heels.
By evening, Adrian called me seventeen times.
I did not answer.
Then the messages began.
Evelyn, stop being childish.
You don’t understand what you’re doing.
Call me now.
Your parents can’t help you.
You’re making this ugly.
Then, finally:
You’ll regret this.
I stared at that last message for a long time.
My father was standing beside the window.
“May I?” he asked.