Part 2
Richard and Celeste Vale entered beneath the chandelier while cold air rushed through the broken window. Vanessa immediately pointed at me.
“She went insane,” she cried. “She destroyed our house because I criticized dinner.”
Our house.
I almost admired the speed of the lie.
Richard stared. They looked from the shattered glass to the turkey lying outside, then to the gravy on my blouse.
“What happened to her?” Celeste asked.
Vanessa’s answer came too quickly. “She threw food at herself. She’s been unstable lately.”
Daniel lowered his eyes.
That hurt more than the insult.
I took out my phone and placed it on the table. “Before dinner, Vanessa asked me to connect the new security system to my account. She said she couldn’t understand the settings.”
Her face emptied.
The kitchen camera had recorded everything: her sneer, the spit, Daniel’s silence, and my response. I played the clip without commentary. Celeste covered her mouth. Richard watched twice.
“You told us she was your housekeeper,” he said to Vanessa.
Vanessa’s lips trembled. “Basically, she is.”
“No,” I said. “I am the owner.”
Daniel finally looked up.
I opened the leather folder I had left beside the wine cabinet. Inside were deeds, shareholder records, loan agreements, and the operating contract for Hartwell Holdings.
“The house, the office, the vehicles, and seventy percent of Daniel’s company are held by my trust. Daniel receives a salary as managing director. Vanessa owns nothing.”
Richard turned slowly toward my son. “You said you had eight million in unencumbered assets.”
Daniel swallowed. “I was going to restructure.”
“You were going to lie,” Richard said.
Vanessa recovered enough to become vicious. “So what? She gave it to us. She can’t take it back because her feelings got hurt.”
“This is not about my feelings.”
I showed them a second document. For the past four months, my accountant had flagged unauthorized transfers from Hartwell Holdings into a private account controlled by Vanessa. Three hundred and eighty thousand dollars had vanished under false consulting invoices. I had delayed confronting them because I needed proof of who was involved.
Daniel went pale. “Mom, I can explain.”
“Then explain the forged signature.”
His mouth opened, but nothing came out.
Richard stepped away from him as if dishonesty were contagious. “The investment is canceled.”
Vanessa spun on her father. “You cannot do that to me!”
“I can do anything I like with my money.”
She slapped the folder from my hands. Papers scattered over the floor.
“You miserable old woman,” she screamed. “Daniel, throw her out!”
Daniel moved toward me, but the front door opened again.
My attorney, my accountant, and two uniformed officers entered.
I had texted them before lifting the turkey.
The officers were not there to arrest anyone yet. They were there to witness the formal service of a preservation order, preventing Daniel and Vanessa from transferring assets or destroying records.
My attorney handed Daniel an envelope.
“You targeted the wrong woman,” she said. “And tonight, she stopped protecting you.”