Victor claimed I was unstable and told investigators I had willingly given him control over our assets.
He did not know that the trust documents he signed weeks earlier protected the company from exactly this situation.
Page seven transferred operational control if an executive attempted unauthorized transfers or fled internationally with company money.
My attorney Diane Caldwell placed the evidence in front of him: the airport photo, financial records, fake accounts, and proof of fraud.
For the first time, Victor realized the woman he called useless had already closed every escape route.
The court froze his access, blocked him from selling assets, and allowed the company audit to continue.
The board removed him, restored the company’s original name, and appointed me chief executive.
Months later, Victor accepted responsibility, Olivia cooperated, and the divorce became final.
I sold the house filled with painful memories and built a life that belonged only to me.
A year after that airport photo, my company won a major regional award.
Victor later admitted he never saw me as weak—he only hated that he needed me.
I read his message, smiled, and replied with the only words he deserved.
“Goodbye.”
Then I blocked his number and finally slept peacefully.