I stood and walked calmly to the clerk with a plain envelope. No drama. No shaking hands. Just paper.

Judge Kline opened it and began reading.

Then something unexpected happened.

She laughed.

Not a polite chuckle—an honest, sharp laugh that echoed around the courtroom.

Ethan’s smirk disappeared instantly. Madison straightened in her seat like someone had pulled a string. Lorraine’s smile froze mid-expression.

Judge Kline lowered the letter and peered over her glasses at Ethan’s lawyer.

“Counselor,” she said slowly, “this is good.”

Ethan’s attorney suddenly looked like a man who realized he’d stepped onto a trapdoor.

And for the first time in a year, something loosened inside my chest. Not happiness—at least not yet.

Relief.

Because the trap had sprung exactly where I planned it.

Judge Kline held the letter thoughtfully.

“Before we discuss enforcing any agreement,” she said, “I need clarification regarding the financial disclosures submitted to this court.”

Ethan’s lawyer blinked. “Your Honor, disclosures were made in accordance with—”

Judge Kline raised a finger.

“I’m asking about accuracy. Not format.”

She looked back at me.

“Mrs. Caldwell, your letter states that significant assets were intentionally omitted. You also reference exhibits. Where are they?”

I reached down, opened my folder, and handed the clerk a neatly organized binder.

“Exhibits A through H,” I said. “There’s also a flash drive containing the digital originals.”

Ethan stood halfway out of his chair.

“This is ridiculous,” he snapped. “She’s bluffing.”

Madison’s hand slid onto his wrist, squeezing tightly as if warning him to sit down. Lorraine leaned forward and whispered something urgent in his ear.

Ethan dropped back into his seat.

Judge Kline flipped open the binder.

“Exhibit A,” she read aloud. “Bank statements. An account at Redwood Private opened eight months prior to filing.”

Ethan’s attorney cleared his throat nervously.

“Your Honor, I am not aware of this account.”

“That,” Judge Kline replied evenly, “is precisely the problem.”

I kept my gaze fixed on the bench. I refused to look at Ethan, even though I could feel the tension building beside me like heat from a fire. Watching him unravel was a temptation I didn’t trust myself with. I promised I would do this properly.

Everything began eleven months earlier.

That was when Ethan told me he wanted a divorce—casually, over dinner, as if he were choosing dessert.