Vanessa did not understand money the way Daniel did. She understood display. She understood velvet ropes, photographs, captions, and envy. Daniel understood signatures, liability, and the narrow line between arrogance and fraud.
“You don’t have anything,” he said, but his voice had dropped.
“I have enough.”
At 10:30 a.m., my attorney, Margaret Sloan, arrived with the kind of posture that made men like Daniel suddenly remember urgent appointments elsewhere. She was in her late fifties, silver-haired, exacting, and allergic to theatrics.
She joined me upstairs while security kept Daniel in the lobby.
Margaret opened her leather briefcase and laid out copies of the documents.
“The club’s bill is itemized,” she said. “Food, alcohol, entertainment, private room fee, luxury boutique purchase, service charge. Total: $990,000. The necklace was never released because payment failed. Good for us. But the signed authorization is the bigger issue.”
I looked down at the copy.
My company name was written in Daniel’s handwriting.
Hayes & Rowe Interiors LLC.
Beneath it, he had signed: Emily Hayes.