He hadn’t just betrayed me.
He had misunderstood me.
Completely.
I walked to the console table, picked up a blue folder, and handed it to him.
“Divorce papers,” I said. “And your removal as company administrator.”
He smirked at first.
Flipped the first page.
Then the second.
Then the third.
The smirk disappeared.
“What did you do?”
I met his eyes.
“I didn’t take your mistress.
I didn’t take your child.”
I stepped closer and took the office keys from his hand.
“I took back the only thing you were never supposed to believe was yours.”
“The company.”
He stepped further into the house, like force of habit would still give him control.
Then he stopped.
At the dining table sat Margaret Hayes, my attorney.
She crossed her legs calmly.
“This is legally binding,” she said. “The company is solely owned by my client through inheritance. His authority was revoked this morning. The bank has already processed it.”
She glanced toward the door.
“And the house is hers as well. You will not be staying here tonight.”
That’s when Lauren understood.
This wasn’t a homecoming.
It was an ending.
She looked at Daniel, confused.
“You told me this was already settled…”
He didn’t answer.
He couldn’t.
That silence told me everything.
He hadn’t just lied to me.
He had lied to her too.
I explained only what was necessary.
That we were still legally married.
That he had used company funds to support another household.
That I had records—rent, gas, childcare, withdrawals—every detail documented.
I could press criminal charges.
I hadn’t.
Yet.
Daniel tried to turn it into emotion.
“I’m not abandoning my son,” he snapped. “What do you expect me to do?”
“Be a father,” I said evenly. “With your own money. Not mine.”
Lauren went very still.
That sentence hit her harder than anything else.
I gave them one hour to leave.
The locksmith was already downstairs.
Daniel cycled through anger, guilt, nostalgia.
He brought up vacations. Anniversaries. Our wedding in Santa Fe.
As if memories could erase three years of deception.
Then came the threat.
“If I go down, you go down with me.”
Margaret slid another document across the table.
“A draft of the criminal complaint,” she said calmly. “You’re welcome to test that.”
He left with nothing.
Lauren followed him.
But two days later… she called me.
We met at a quiet café in Austin.
No makeup. No pretense.
Ethan asleep in his stroller.
She told me what Daniel had said to her—