
Justice for the Humiliated
Chapter 3
"You're Eve," Harrison repeated, his face contorting as the reality sank in. "All this time..." His voice trailed off before suddenly hardening. He slammed his fist on the desk, sending papers flying. "You've been lying to me for ten years!"
I didn't flinch. "I never lied. You simply never asked."
"Don't play games with me!" His face reddened as he stood, looming over the desk. "You deliberately deceived me, made me look like a fool!"
"No, Harrison. You did that all by yourself." I remained seated, my voice steady. "Every time you humiliated me at dinner parties. Every time you explained basic finances to me while I managed millions. Every time you brought home Aura's perfume on your collar."
He froze. "What did you say?"
"Aura Hansen." I pulled out another folder. "Your mistress for the past eighteen months. The one you've been meeting every Tuesday and Thursday at the Westlake Hotel, room 712."
Harrison's composure cracked. "You had me followed? You little—"
"I didn't need to have you followed." I cut him off. "Your credit card statements were enough. That, and the lipstick shade she wears—Crimson Affair. Very distinctive on white shirt collars."
"I'll destroy you," he hissed, desperation creeping into his voice. "No one will believe you're Eve. I'll tell everyone you're delusional, that you need psychiatric help."
I smiled, opening my laptop. "Before you embark on that particular strategy, you might want to see what else I've discovered."
I turned the screen toward him, displaying a spreadsheet I'd found on his personal computer three weeks ago. His face drained of color.
"That's... that's private company information."
"It's evidence of tax evasion," I corrected. "And this—" I clicked to another file, "—appears to be a detailed record of money laundered through offshore accounts. Fascinating reading, really."
Harrison stumbled backward, collapsing into his chair. "How did you get access to these files?"
"Your password hasn't changed in three years, Harrison. Your mother's birthday followed by 'genius.' Not very creative."
He lunged for the laptop, but I was faster, sliding it away. "Copies have already been secured. Several copies, actually, in several locations."
"What do you want?" His voice had lost its commanding edge, replaced by something close to panic.
"I want what I said last night—a divorce. But now I also want you to understand exactly what you're losing."
---
The following morning, I met Sophie at her office downtown. The private investigator she'd recommended was already waiting—a sharp-eyed woman named Diane who looked like she could extract secrets from stone.
"I've reviewed the initial documents," Diane said, spreading files across Sophie's conference table. "There's enough here to warrant a full investigation, but we'll need more concrete evidence of the money laundering."
"I can get it," I assured her. "Harrison's careless. He thinks he's untouchable."
Sophie squeezed my hand. "Are you sure you want to go this route? Divorce him, take your share, and walk away clean?"
I shook my head. "It's not about money. It's about justice. He didn't just hurt me—he's hurt others through his business practices. And he'll keep doing it unless someone stops him."
Diane nodded approvingly. "I'll assemble a team. We'll need forensic accountants to trace the money trails, and I have contacts who can help secure electronic evidence legally."
"Cost is no object," I said, sliding a check across the table that made both women's eyes widen.
"I'll also need to protect my own assets," I continued. "Harrison will try to claim he's entitled to half of Eve's fortune once he realizes its extent."
Sophie, ever the practical one, was already typing on her laptop. "I'm contacting Marcos in Zurich. He can help secure your international holdings immediately."
"And I'll reach out to Jean-Claude," I added. "The museum contracts can be amended to protect the collections."
As we worked through the morning, I felt a strange sense of liberation. For ten years, I'd compartmentalized my life—Cassandra in one box, Eve in another. Now, as the walls between those identities crumbled, I found strength flowing from one to the other.
"You know he won't go down without a fight," Sophie warned as we reviewed the growing mountain of evidence.
I thought of Harrison's face when he realized who I really was—the shock, the rage, but most of all, the fear. "Let him fight. For the first time, we're on even ground."
Diane looked up from her notes. "With what we've gathered so far, and what we'll find in the coming weeks, he won't just lose his marriage, Ms. Mitchell. He could lose everything."
"Good," I said, feeling the weight of ten years lifting from my shoulders. "It's about time."
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