At that moment I realized they truly had no idea what was about to happen.
Two nights earlier, while I was attending a charity board dinner, Trevor had taken my platinum card from the locked drawer in my home office. He used it to book first-class flights to Aspen, a luxury ski resort, along with a weeklong stay for himself, his parents, and his sister Chloe.
He didn’t even bother asking.
Instead, he left a smug note on the kitchen counter: Family trip. You can cover it. We deserve it after all the stress you cause.
I almost admired the audacity.
Almost.
Instead of panicking, I called the bank, reported the card stolen, froze the account, and flagged every charge. Then I contacted my attorney, Gloria Bennett, and told her to begin preparing everything we had quietly discussed for months.
Because Trevor stealing the card wasn’t the beginning of the end.
It was simply the final proof I needed.
For years Trevor had lived comfortably off my income while pretending his family came from old money. In reality, the Calloways were buried in debt and desperate to maintain appearances.
The house Diane constantly threatened me with?
It legally belonged to me through a trust Trevor never bothered to understand.
So when he screamed from Aspen demanding obedience and threatening divorce, Gloria had already arranged for a process server.
I let Trevor rant.
I let Diane threaten.
I even let Chloe send me messages calling me “vindictive” and “classless.”
Then I sent Trevor one short reply:
Enjoy the trip. It’s the last luxury you’ll ever take from me.
Three days later, they returned home early.
I stood outside when their SUV pulled up. Their faces were dark with anger, ski gear piled in the back. They marched toward me ready for a fight.
Then they stopped.
Because standing beside me was Gloria Bennett, two associates from her firm, a financial investigator, and a sheriff’s deputy.
Trevor’s face lost all color.
Diane stared in shock.
And I smiled.
Trevor tried to recover first.
“What is this?” he demanded. “Vanessa, what stunt are you pulling?”
“A legal one,” Gloria answered calmly. She handed him a folder. “Trevor Calloway, you are being served with divorce papers, a financial restraining order, a petition for exclusive occupancy, and a civil claim regarding unauthorized use of my client’s financial accounts.”

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