I Filed for Divorce—Then Told My Father, “Fire Everyone My In-Laws Hired.”

PART 2

When I walked into the marble lobby of Crestwood Holdings at exactly 2:03 p.m., the young man at the security desk still smiled and called me Mrs. Vance.

Thirty seconds later, his terminal flashed red.

His badge stopped working.

Upstairs on the executive floor, my ex-mother-in-law began screaming so loudly that the entire glass atrium went silent.

Dominic truly believed the final signature on our divorce decree meant he could inherit my father’s life’s work. Natalie believed she would soon be moving her designer belongings into my corner office. Victoria Vance believed she had planted her family’s corrupt network too deeply for anyone to remove it.

But they had forgotten one important thing.

Arthur Crestwood did not build a multi-billion-dollar real estate empire by trusting pretty smiles and empty promises.

He built it by keeping receipts.

And by sunset, every person with the Vance name, or a contract tied to their influence, would learn the difference between being hired and being exposed.

The elevator doors opened on the fourteenth floor with a soft chime.

Victoria’s shriek cut through the glass partitions.

She stood outside the executive suite, her designer handbag thrown across the receptionist’s desk, her face red with rage. Thomas from HR stood a few feet away, arms neatly crossed, with two security guards holding tablets beside him.

“This is an outrage!” Victoria shouted, slamming her manicured hand against the marble counter. “I am the Senior Vice President of Global Procurement. You cannot lock my terminal. My team is closing a critical vendor contract with Nexus Logistics.”

“Nexus Logistics is a shell company registered to your brother,” I said, stepping out of the elevator.

The floor went still.

Every assistant, associate, and executive froze as I walked down the corridor.

Victoria spun around, her eyes burning.

“Audrey! Tell this ridiculous HR clerk to restore my access immediately. Your father is senile if he thinks he can run this company without me.”

“My father is upstairs reviewing federal indictment paperwork with our legal team,” I said, stopping two feet from her.

I opened my bag, pulled out the finalized divorce decree, and placed it on the reception desk beside her purse.

“And as of 1:15 p.m. today, I am no longer a Vance. That makes you an unauthorized intruder in this building.”

Thomas tapped his tablet.

“Mrs. Vance, your employment is terminated with cause, effective immediately. Your corporate accounts are frozen. Your company vehicle lease has been revoked. Your operational signature is no longer recognized by our banking partners.”

“You can’t do this!” she screamed. “My son runs the operational board. Dominic will have you all fired by morning.”

Right then, the private elevator chimed again.

Dominic burst onto the floor, his jacket gone, his tie loose, his face slick with panic. He had clearly tried to use his corporate card at a restaurant down the street and discovered it had been declined. His company phone had probably gone dark moments later.

“Audrey!” he barked, rushing toward me. “What the hell is happening in finance? Accounting locked out my entire project management staff. We have three active construction sites stalled because the system is rejecting our material vouchers.”

I turned slowly.

“Those three construction sites were using subcontractors owned by your family members, Dominic. You have been overbilling my family’s trust by forty percent for eighteen months.”

Dominic went rigid.

His pale blue eyes darted across the floor as he realized how many employees were watching his kingdom collapse in real time.

“You don’t know what you’re talking about,” he snapped. “Those are legitimate operating costs. You’re disrupting infrastructure because of personal revenge. The board will vote you out by emergency proxy.”

“The board is upstairs, Dominic,” a deep voice said from the executive stairwell.

My father descended slowly, leaning on his cane but carrying the presence of a titan. Behind him were three attorneys from our primary law firm and a stern-looking woman holding a federal folio.

“And the board,” my father continued, “has just voted unanimously to dissolve the entire regional management tier. You have no proxy, Dominic. You do not even have a parking space.”

Dominic stepped back.

Victoria grabbed his arm, her diamond bracelets rattling as her confidence began to twist into fear.

“Arthur, listen to me,” Dominic said, his voice suddenly smooth and pleading. “We’re family. Whatever financial discrepancies you think you found, we can audit them internally. We can restructure. There is no need for a public scandal that damages the Crestwood name.”

“The only name being destroyed today is Vance,” said the woman beside my father.

She stepped forward and showed her badge.

“I am Special Agent Chloe Park with the Financial Crimes Division. Mr. Vance, Mrs. Vance, we are executing federal search warrants for digital devices, personal bank accounts, and corporate files connected to systematic interstate wire fraud, identity theft, and commercial embezzlement.”

From the elevator bank, Natalie stepped out, clutching her luxury bag like a shield.

Her face went white.

She had arrived expecting to watch Dominic take control.

Instead, she had walked straight into a corporate collapse.

She saw the federal badges, saw Dominic’s panic, and took three steps backward into the elevator.

She did not say a word to defend him.

Dominic did not even notice her leave.

He was staring at the tablet Thomas held out. On the screen was a color-coded map of every shell company, fake invoice, and offshore wire tied to the Vance network.

“Every cousin you placed on payroll, every uncle running a fake consulting firm, every vendor invoice your mother approved has been traced back to a central accounts-payable file,” I told him. “You thought my father was too old to notice, and you thought I was too broken by your affair to read the ledgers. But while you were leaving me in empty rooms to meet Natalie, I was sitting in my father’s study cataloging your fraud.”

Victoria let out a furious cry and lunged toward me.

Marcus and another security guard stopped her instantly.

“Remove them from the premises,” my father ordered. “If they resist, the NYPD officers waiting in the lobby can handle the rest.”

As security guided Victoria and a stunned Dominic toward the service elevators, the entire executive floor stayed silent.

The purge was absolute.

By 5:00 p.m., forty-two employees tied to the Vance family network had been escorted from regional offices across three states.

Every fraudulent contract connected to them was terminated with cause.

**FINAL**

Six months later, the setting sun poured golden light across the windows of the Crestwood Holdings boardroom.

The air felt clean.

Quiet.

Free of the tension that had haunted the final years of my marriage.

My father sat at the head of the mahogany table with a peaceful smile as he watched me review the Q3 financial reports.

The numbers were beautiful.

Without the millions bleeding into Vance-controlled vendors, the company’s net margins had jumped by thirty-two percent.

The legal machine had moved with brutal precision.

Dominic Vance pleaded guilty to federal wire fraud and grand larceny to avoid the maximum sentence, but the judge still gave him nine years in federal prison. Victoria was sentenced to six years for directing the procurement fraud, and her Gold Coast assets were liquidated to pay civil restitution.

Their extended family network was bankrupted.

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