Part 2

PART 2

By noon, Daniel was posting pictures from a private catamaran. Vanessa wore the bracelet he had once told me he had lost.

His caption said, “Finally living for myself.”

I saved every photo with timestamps.

Then I called Mara Chen, a divorce attorney who had once hired me as an expert witness. She arrived at the hospital in a suit, ready for battle.

“He forged your signature, emptied a protected family account, and used company money for an affair trip,” she said. “Did he touch your separate property too?”

“I think so.”

I handed her my laptop.

Together, we uncovered eighteen months of transfers from my royalties into Northstar Advisory, a shell company registered under Vanessa’s brother. Daniel had stolen another $112,000, assuming pregnancy had made me too distracted to notice.

Mara looked at me and said, “He chose the wrong woman.”

“No,” I replied. “He married the wrong woman.”

We moved carefully.

First, Mara filed an emergency petition to freeze marital assets and stop further transfers. Then she contacted the bank’s fraud department and reported the forged signature. Because the Hawaii charges were still pending and the account had a medical purpose, the bank froze Daniel’s cards during the investigation.

I did not cancel his flights myself. That would have been petty and possibly unlawful.

Instead, Mara notified Daniel’s employer that company funds appeared to have been used for personal travel. The company canceled the hotel authorization and return flights to prevent more unauthorized spending.

At 2:17 p.m., Daniel called.

“What did you do?” he snapped.

Lily was asleep against my chest.

“I reported fraud,” I said.

“My card got declined in front of everyone.”

“Then ask Vanessa to pay.”

Silence.

“Her cards aren’t working either.”

Of course they weren’t. Her accounts had received money connected to Northstar, and the bank had flagged them too.

Daniel lowered his voice. “Fix this, Claire.”

“You emptied our newborn’s emergency fund while I was recovering from surgery.”

“I was going to put it back.”

“With what?” I asked. “The money you stole from my royalties?”

The ocean behind him suddenly sounded very quiet.

Then Vanessa grabbed the phone.

“You jealous nobody,” she hissed. “Daniel said your software barely makes anything.”

I smiled.

She had no idea that my software had just been licensed by a national hospital network. The first payment—$460,000—was due the following month in a separate trust Daniel could not touch.

“Enjoy the suite,” I said. “Corporate security is checking who paid for it.”

Her voice cracked. “What?”

I ended the call.

By four o’clock, Daniel’s company counsel contacted me. I gave them only verified documents: expense reports, forged approvals, messages where Vanessa suggested disguising the trip as investor outreach, and Daniel’s reply saying, “Claire never checks anything.”

By five, both Daniel and Vanessa were suspended pending investigation.

By six, the resort locked them out after the corporate card authorization was withdrawn.

Daniel sent twenty-three messages—threats, apologies, accusations, and promises.

His final message said:

“You’re destroying Lily’s family.”

I took a photo of my daughter sleeping beneath the hospital lights and replied only once.

“No, Daniel. I’m saving her from it.”

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