That truth settled harder than any accusation.
I called the final witness, and the doors opened to reveal Andrew Collins, the longtime financial controller.
Margaret whispered his name with a mix of shock and betrayal.
Andrew took the oath and began speaking with calm clarity about years of concealed transactions and pressure to falsify records.
“Why are you cooperating now?” I asked.
“Because fraud became cruelty,” he answered without hesitation.
Margaret lashed out, but no one listened anymore.
Daniel eventually took the stand, and his answers confirmed everything the evidence had already shown.
“When she was struck, why did you look away?” I asked him.
“Because I would have had to choose,” he admitted.
“And you did not,” I said.
“No,” he replied, his voice breaking.
That was the end of anything that had once resembled a marriage.
Orders were issued, accounts were frozen, and the case moved beyond divorce into consequences that would follow them for years.
I asked for no house and no payment beyond what was rightfully owed.
I requested restoration of stolen funds and their return to the programs they were meant to support.
Margaret laughed bitterly and accused me of performing generosity.
“No,” I said, “I am correcting theft.”
When the hearing ended, I walked out of the courtroom without looking back.
In the hallway, officers were already handling the fallout that had begun.
Daniel stopped me near the exit and said, “I loved you.”
“You loved access to my forgiveness,” I replied.
“Is there anything I can do?” he asked.
“Yes,” I said, “tell the truth even when it costs you.”
I left him there and stepped into the sunlight outside the courthouse.
My younger brother, Lucas Reed, stood waiting near a taxi with concern in his eyes.
“Well?” he asked.
“It is over,” I said.
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