Because of his first love, my hubby threw $250 million at me & demanded a divorce: “Divorce me! The child is yours. I don’t have a son with such a low iq!” On the day we went to court, my son needed only 10s to destroy their family…! — Part 2

I signed nothing that morning.

I simply folded the divorce papers, kissed Ethan’s hair, and said, “We’ll see you in court.”

PART 2: The Mistake

When Adrian realized I wasn’t afraid, he became even crueler.

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For three weeks, he acted like he had already won. He moved Vanessa into the penthouse. He posted pictures of champagne, diamonds, and sunsets. His mother, Evelyn Voss, called me from blocked numbers just to whisper, “A man like Adrian was never meant to raise a slow child.”

I recorded everything.

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Vanessa was worse because she wrapped cruelty in fake kindness. She sent Ethan toddler learning toys tied with white ribbons. One note said, “Maybe this level suits him better.”

Ethan stared at the boxes for a long time.

Then he asked, “Mom, why does she write like she’s left-handed but sign like she’s right-handed?”

I froze.

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“What do you mean, sweetheart?”

“The pressure is wrong,” he said. “The letters lean the opposite way. Like someone copied another person’s signature.”

That night, I pulled every document Vanessa had submitted through Adrian’s legal team: affidavits, trust papers, property declarations, and a notarized statement claiming she had no financial interest in Voss Meridian.

Ethan sat beside me in dinosaur pajamas, quietly building a tower from paper clips.

On the third document, I saw it.

The signature was supposed to be Vanessa’s.

But the pen pressure, spacing, and broken strokes matched someone else.

Evelyn Voss.

Adrian’s mother had been forging Vanessa’s name to move assets into shell companies before the divorce. They were trying to make it look as if Adrian owned far less than he did.

They were not only trying to replace me.

They were trying to drain the company before my shareholder rights could activate.

They had chosen the wrong wife.

Two days before court, Adrian arrived at my temporary apartment with Vanessa on his arm and photographers hiding near the elevator.

He held up a new offer.

“Three hundred million,” he said. “Final chance.”

I glanced at the paper. “You raised the number because you’re scared.”

He laughed too loudly. “I raised it because I want you gone before my son is born.”

The hallway seemed to tilt.

Vanessa placed a hand over her stomach and smiled.

Ethan stepped out from behind me.

“Your baby?” he asked.

Adrian looked down at him with disgust. “Yes. My real son.”

Ethan blinked.

“But the blood type on her hospital bracelet in the photo is AB negative,” he said. “Yours is O positive. If she is telling the truth, that does not make sense.”

Vanessa went pale.

Adrian’s mouth opened, then closed.

I looked at my son, then at the woman who had mocked him for being slow.

He had noticed in seconds what Adrian’s lawyers had missed for months.

That night, my attorney filed emergency motions: an asset freeze, a forensic audit, subpoenas for medical records, and sanctions for fraud.

I also sent one sealed envelope to the judge’s clerk.

Inside was everything.

PART 3: The Courtroom

Courtroom 14 smelled like polished wood, expensive cologne, and panic hidden beneath confidence.

Continue to Part 3 Part 2 of 3
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