
Auditing His Lies: The Billionaire's Downfall
Chapter 2
Chapter 2
The diner smelled of burnt filter coffee, old grease, and the sour tang of wet wool. It was a narrow, claustrophobic establishment huddled in the shadows of the Brooklyn Bridge, far away from the gleaming glass towers of Julian’s Silicon Valley playground. The fluorescent lights overhead flickered with a persistent, annoying buzz, casting sickly yellow shadows across the chipped Formica tables.
I sat in the back booth, a vinyl seat held together by duct tape, nursing a mug of black coffee I had no intention of drinking. I checked my Rolex. 10:14 AM.
Exactly one minute later, the diner door swung open, letting in a gust of damp, freezing rain. A man slid into the booth across from me without a word. He wore a nondescript gray raincoat, and his face was utterly forgettable—the kind of face that disappeared into a crowd the moment you looked away.
"You're late, Marcus," I said, my voice cutting through the clatter of silverware from the kitchen.
Marcus wiped the rain from his wire-rimmed glasses and offered a tight, apologetic grimace. "Traffic on the BQE. You know how it is, Mrs. Sterling."
"Vance," I corrected him sharply, my expression stoic. "I use Vance when conducting business. And this is business."
"Right. Ms. Vance." Marcus reached into his battered leather messenger bag and produced a thick manila envelope, sliding it across the sticky table. "I have to admit, when you contacted me on the encrypted channel, I was skeptical. Most spouses looking for hidden assets are paranoid housewives chasing shadows. But you… you handed me a fully decoded offshore ledger."
"I don't chase shadows," I said, resting my hands on top of the envelope. "I analyze data. Tell me what you found."
Marcus leaned forward, lowering his voice until it was barely a rasp over the diner’s ambient noise. "You were right about the three shell companies. Sapphire, Ruby, and Emerald. They are completely fraudulent. No business licenses, no tax filings, no physical addresses other than registered PO boxes in Delaware."
"Break down the spending habits," I commanded, my eyes locked on his.
"It's a textbook embezzlement operation, heavily disguised as operational overhead," Marcus explained, pulling a small notebook from his pocket and flipping it open. "Let's start with Sapphire Innovations. The beneficiary is a Chloe Adams. Twenty-two. Over the last eight months, your husband’s 'company' has paid for a luxury loft in Tribeca, leased a 2024 Porsche Panamera in her name, and covered roughly eighty thousand dollars in luxury retail purchases. Bags, shoes, the works."
"Next," I said, my voice completely devoid of emotion. I didn't care about Chloe Adams. She was a line item.
"Ruby Logistics. Beneficiary: Mia Thorne. Twenty-four. Miami. He bought her a condo outright. Cash purchase, funneled through the LLC. Plus a monthly stipend of thirty thousand dollars categorized under 'Logistics and Shipping'." Marcus let out a low whistle. "He's creative, I'll give him that."
"He's an idiot," I countered coldly. "He used sequential routing numbers for the initial deposits. A child could track the money flow. What about Emerald Holdings?"
"Ah. Emerald," Marcus tapped his pen against the notebook. "That one is a bit messier. Beneficiary is a Jessica Hale in Los Angeles. Acting classes, headshots, and a very expensive PR firm on retainer. But here's the kicker—he’s also paying off her student loans directly from Sterling-Vance’s corporate reserve account."
I did the math in my head instantly. The real estate, the cars, the stipends, the retail. "That accounts for roughly two point eight million of the missing four point two."
"Exactly," Marcus said, nodding. "Your husband is funding three separate lives. Three different women. He flies to Miami and LA on 'business trips' and uses the corporate card for the flights, then uses the stolen funds to maintain them. It's a massive liability."
"I am aware of the liability," I said, my tone flat. "What I need to know is how exposed the company is if the SEC audits us before the IPO."
Marcus grimaced. "If the SEC looks at this ledger, Sterling-Vance is dead in the water. The IPO will be halted, and your husband will face federal charges for wire fraud and corporate embezzlement. And, frankly, as the CFO... you would be implicated."
"I won't be," I replied, my voice dropping an octave, laced with a chilling certainty. "Because I am going to audit him first. I am going to strip this company down to the studs, restructure the IP ownership, and sever his equity before he even realizes he's bleeding."
Marcus stared at me, a flicker of genuine intimidation crossing his unremarkable features. "You're not going to confront him?"
"Confrontation gives the enemy time to prepare a defense," I said, sliding the manila envelope closer to me. "I am not interested in a messy divorce where he hides assets and drags my name through the mud. I am going to legally and financially annihilate him. Did you look into the fourth payment? The one to Victoria Croft?"
Marcus hesitated, looking around the diner nervously before speaking. "I did. That's where this goes from a standard cheating scandal to a highly volatile corporate conspiracy."
"Explain."
"Victoria Croft isn't just taking half a million a month," Marcus whispered. "She's using those funds to quietly buy up Sterling-Vance debt through a proxy firm. She's consolidating power. If I didn't know any better, I'd say she’s preparing to force a hostile takeover from the inside."
I processed this new variable. Victoria was arrogant, territorial, and vicious. She didn't just want Julian; she wanted the empire I built. She was using my husband's stolen money to buy my company out from under me.
"Interesting," I murmured. It was a beautiful, complex equation. And I was going to rewrite the variables.
"There's one more thing," Marcus said, reaching into his pocket. He pulled out a glossy, high-resolution photograph and placed it face-down on the table. "I had a guy tailing Julian yesterday afternoon. He told you he was at a strategy meeting with the marketing team, right?"
"Yes. From two until five."
"He was at Cartier on Fifth Avenue," Marcus said. "I thought you should see this."
I reached out and flipped the photograph over.
It was a shot taken through the glass storefront. Julian was standing at the VIP counter, dressed in his tailored suit, his charismatic smile in full force. He was holding up a stunning, blindingly bright diamond necklace. The stones were massive, intricately set in a platinum cascading design.
"My guy inside verified the purchase," Marcus said softly. "One hundred thousand dollars. Paid for in cash, withdrawn from a newly opened Cayman account."
I stared at the photograph. I had never cared for jewelry. I found it impractical. But I understood the mathematics of a hundred-thousand-dollar gift. That was not a gift for a Tribeca sugar baby or a Miami fitness influencer. That was an anchor. That was a statement of intent.
And it was certainly not for me. My neck was bare, and my husband had come home last night with nothing but lies about server costs.
"Thank you, Marcus," I said, my voice perfectly level. I slid a thick envelope of cash across the table. "Your retainer. I will contact you when I need the final forensic report compiled for the board."
Marcus took the cash, his eyes lingering on my stoic face. "Are you okay, Ms. Vance?"
I looked up from the photograph, my expression a mask of absolute, terrifying calm. "I have never been better, Marcus. The math is finally making sense."
I stood up, leaving the untouched coffee on the table, and walked out into the freezing rain. I had a board meeting to attend, and I needed to see exactly whose neck was wearing my money.
***
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