My husband took his mistress to a five-star hotel and booked the most expensive suite, convinced I still knew nothing about his business dealings. When I walked into the restaurant, I simply said, “Welcome to my hotel,” placed the divorce papers beside his wine glass, and pulled out proof of a forged signature worth 38 million dollars. — Part 2

“I know enough to have uncovered eleven unauthorized transfers, four contracts with your own front companies, and two family properties you pledged as collateral for your personal debts,” Fiona said, her voice never wavering.

Katelyn looked at Holden, horrified. “What is she talking about?” she asked.

Holden stayed silent, his face draining of all color. Fiona opened the folder and pointed to a specific document. “I also know that you forged my signature to guarantee a personal debt of over thirty million dollars,” she added.

“Be very careful what you say here,” Holden growled, leaning over the table.

“It isn’t a statement, it is a formal expert opinion from a forensic accountant,” Fiona said.

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The entire restaurant was frozen, the tension thick enough to suffocate everyone in the room. The hotel manager stepped up to Katelyn and gestured toward the door. “Ms. Reed, there is a private car waiting to take you home, and you will receive a formal notification from your employer on Monday morning,” he said.

“I swear I didn’t know anything about the fraud,” Katelyn pleaded, her eyes welling with tears.

“But you did know you were traveling with a married man, and you chose to ignore it,” Fiona replied. “Do not mistake your ignorance for innocence.”

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Katelyn grabbed her handbag and turned, expecting Holden to defend her, but he didn’t even look at her. In that crushing moment, he finally realized that his promises had been nothing more than empty, borrowed words.

“I am so sorry,” Katelyn whispered, walking away with her head bowed.

Holden remained standing, his breathing becoming shallow and ragged. Fiona placed a second folder on the table between them. “This is the official petition for divorce,” she said.

“I will not sign those papers,” Holden declared, trying to project strength he no longer possessed.

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“I don’t need your permission to file them,” Fiona replied.

“You are just doing this to humiliate me in front of everyone,” he shouted, losing his cool.

“For years, you used my silence to paint yourself as the visionary leader, but do not confuse the natural consequences of your actions with humiliation,” Fiona said.

Holden looked toward the lawyer. “This can all be resolved privately if we just talk this out,” he pleaded.

“Private property rights end the moment you start mortgaging someone else’s assets to fund your greed,” Sigrid said, folding her arms.

Fiona pulled out a single sheet of paper and set it next to the wine glass. Holden picked it up, his hands shaking. It was a copy of a massive transfer to a company called Meridian Holdings.

His face turned ashen. That company was supposed to be untraceable, a secret project he had built with an associate to hide losses from a disastrous development deal. But the real terror struck when he saw an account number written at the bottom of the page. It belonged to someone whose existence Fiona hadn’t even mentioned yet.

“Where did you get this?” he asked, his voice barely audible.

“From the person you tried to scapegoat the moment the walls started closing in,” Fiona said.

Holden gripped the paper so tightly it wrinkled in his fist. “You don’t understand what this means,” he said, sweating now.

“I understand everything, and I know exactly who received the money and why he kept every single message you ever sent him,” Fiona said. She closed the folder with a definitive snap. “Tomorrow, at nine in the morning, that person is going to testify before the board and hand over the original copies of every document you signed.”

“You can’t do this to me!” Holden screamed.

Before Fiona reached the exit, she stopped and looked back at him one last time. “Enjoy the wine, because it is quite literally the last thing you will ever pay for with my family name,” she said.

Holden looked at the account name again, his mind racing. He had been so certain he had wiped every digital footprint, yet he had forgotten that greed makes everyone a potential informant. If that person spoke, he would lose more than his wife and his company; he would be looking at a prison sentence. The worst part wasn’t just that Fiona knew the truth. The worst part was knowing exactly who was about to testify against him.

Chapter 3: The Price of Greed

Holden spent the night wandering the hotel lobby, unable to face the suite filled with the remnants of his failed life. He refused to go back to the house in the hills, knowing that Fiona had already instructed security to block his entry. He sat near the portrait of Thomas Norwood, the man whose fortune he had treated like a personal piggy bank. At one-twenty in the morning, he pulled out his phone and dialed his private attorney.

“Daniel, you need to get to the hotel immediately,” he said, his voice raw.

“What happened?” the lawyer asked, clearly groggy.

“Fiona found out about the Meridian Holdings account,” Holden admitted.

There was a long, heavy silence on the other end of the line. “Do you still have the original contracts?” the lawyer asked.

“It has the transfer records,” Holden said.

“The ones that Gerald Salas received?” the lawyer pressed.

Holden closed his eyes, remembering the terrified look on his accountant’s face. “He is going to testify against me in the morning,” Holden said.

“I warned you months ago not to drag him into this,” the lawyer hissed.

“He accepted the deal,” Holden muttered.

“He only accepted because you threatened to frame him for every crime you committed, and he is a family man who reached his breaking point,” the lawyer replied.

Gerald Salas had worked for Holden for eight long years, serving as a quiet, efficient accountant who was eventually forced to sign off on illegal transactions. When he had tried to quit, Holden had threatened to ruin his career and his family’s livelihood, forcing him to keep records of every lie.

At nine o’clock the following morning, the board of directors gathered in the executive boardroom of the Grand Meridian. Fiona took the head of the table, a seat she had left vacant for years so Holden could pretend he was the one in charge. Facing her were seven board members, Sigrid Green, an external auditor, and a visibly shaken Gerald Salas.

“I know I should have come forward sooner,” Gerald began, his voice trembling as he laid a flash drive on the table. “I allowed these things to happen because I was terrified of losing my job and having Holden ruin my name,” he said.

The auditor pulled up the documents on the massive screen. Holden had funneled millions from the hotel group to save a residential complex in the northern valley that was failing due to permit issues and lack of oversight. To cover the massive losses, he used family properties as collateral without any authorization. The board watched as the evidence of his fraud was laid bare, one document after another. But there was something even darker.

“We discovered monthly payments to a second, secret account,” Gerald explained, his face flushed with shame. “Holden instructed me to register them as consulting fees,” he said.

Fiona looked at the screen, her expression unreadable. “Who received those payments?” she asked.

Gerald swallowed hard. “His brother, Caleb Norwood,” Gerald said.

The room fell into a deathly, shocked silence. Caleb was Fiona’s younger brother, who had moved to the coast years ago and claimed he wanted nothing to do with the family business. Fiona felt a deeper, sharper pain than the one caused by Holden’s infidelity. Was Caleb truly involved, she wondered.

“He introduced Holden to the investors and received a kickback for every single transfer that moved through the accounts,” Gerald explained.

Sigrid placed a firm hand on Fiona’s arm to keep her steady. The betrayal didn’t just come from the man who shared her bed; it came from her own blood. At ten-fifteen, Caleb walked into the room, flanked by his own legal team, having been flown in from the coast overnight. Fiona looked at him without rising from her chair.

“Did you really sell our father’s land?” she asked.

Caleb refused to meet her eyes, staring at the floor. “I didn’t sell it, I just let them use it as collateral for a loan,” he mumbled. “Holden told me the project would make us all three times the money,” he added.

“And that is why you were taking secret payments in the dark?” Fiona asked.

“It was my rightful share,” Caleb snapped.

“Your share was explicitly defined in the will, and you chose to walk away from the company years ago,” Fiona said.

“Because Dad always trusted you more than me,” Caleb shouted.

“Dad trusted the person who actually showed up for work every single day,” Fiona retorted.

Caleb slammed his fist onto the table, but he couldn’t find a single word to counter the truth. For years, Caleb had harbored deep resentment, and Holden had exploited that wound to ensure he had an accomplice. The auditor played one final recording, and the entire room froze as Holden’s voice filled the space.

“Fiona signs whatever I put in front of her because she is too infatuated to check, and if this goes south, we will just pin it on the accountant,” the recording played.

Gerald lowered his gaze, and Caleb finally closed his eyes, realizing how far he had been manipulated. The board voted unanimously to strip Holden of all titles and positions, and they authorized the legal team to recover every cent he had misappropriated. By that afternoon, the private company Holden founded was in chaos as investigators moved in.

He arrived at the office with his lawyer, but no one offered him a coffee, and no one met his eyes. The men who had once toasted his success now looked at him as if he were radioactive.

“We can negotiate a graceful exit for me,” Holden said, trying to save face.

The board chairman pushed a document across the table. “We aren’t here to negotiate your departure; we are here to officially suspend your access to all accounts and demand your immediate resignation,” the chairman said.

Continue to Part 3 Part 2 of 3
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