For a moment, the room tilted—not from fear, but from insult. He had not even made a serious attempt to copy my signature. He had assumed no one would question him because he was Daniel Whitmore and I had once been his wife.
Margaret tapped the paper. “That is attempted unauthorized use of a financial instrument and possible forgery. Aurum House is willing to cooperate because they want distance from this mess.”
My father sat beside me, quiet but watchful.
“What about Vanessa?” I asked.
Margaret pulled out another page. “She posted enough evidence online to decorate a courtroom. Videos of the room. The necklace tray. Daniel handing over the card. Her caption saying, and I quote, ‘Divorce looks good on us.’”
I laughed once, sharply. It startled even me.
Margaret’s mouth twitched. “Yes. People do make our jobs easier.”
By noon, Daniel had left the lobby, but not before giving one final performance. He told security I was unstable. He told Grace I was punishing him for finding true love. He told a delivery driver that rich women were the most dangerous creatures alive.
Grace sent me a message afterward.
He forgot the cameras record audio.
I replied: Save everything.