
The Psycho Wife’s Final Revenge
Chapter 5
Julian Hayes dropped a thick, stapled contract onto the center of his walnut desk. The heavy paper landed with a dull thud.
"Look at page four," Julian instructed.
I flipped the pages over. A blue ink signature rested on the bottom line. It spelled out my name in looping cursive.
"I didn't sign this," I stated, tracing the fake letters with my index finger.
"I know you didn't," Julian replied, leaning back in his leather chair. "Because you were in Chicago on the date it was notarized. Your husband secured a two-and-a-half-million-dollar secondary mortgage on your primary residence."
"He forged my signature to borrow against a house I paid for."
"He did. And the funds were routed directly into his failing consulting firm." Julian steepled his fingers, his dark eyes locked on mine. "If his company goes under, the bank seizes your home. You are entirely liable."
I stared at the blue ink. A normal wife might cry. She might scream or ask how the man she married could betray her so deeply.
Instead, an icy wave of pure focus washed over me. I tapped the forged paper.
"He thinks I'll cover the debt to avoid a public scandal," I murmured.
"Most high-net-worth spouses do," Julian pointed out. "They pay the quiet price to keep the peace. Is that what you want to do, Mrs. Vance?"
I pushed the forged document back across the desk.
"I want him ruined," I told my lawyer. "I want every asset stripped, every account locked, and I want him to feel the exact moment his safety net disappears."
A sharp, predatory smile touched the corners of Julian’s mouth. This was why he commanded a thousand dollars an hour. He didn't handle amicable splits. He dismantled people.
He opened his top drawer and pulled out a fresh stack of legal forms.
"Sign the Power of Attorney," Julian ordered, sliding a silver pen toward me. "This grants me full control to act on your behalf financially and legally."
I picked up the pen and signed my real name on the dotted line.
Julian immediately pressed the intercom button on his console.
"Sarah," he commanded. "Draft an emergency ex parte motion. I want a total freeze on Mark Vance's personal and business assets."
"On what grounds, Mr. Hayes?" the speaker crackled.
"Fraudulent conveyance and dissipation of marital funds. File it with the clerk before noon."
Julian released the button and looked at me. "The court will grant the freeze by tomorrow morning. But until the judge signs the order, he still has access to whatever liquid cash is sitting in your joint accounts."
"Not for long," I said, standing up from the leather chair. "I have errands to run."
"Keep your phone on," Julian advised. "When the walls close in, he's going to lash out."
"Let him."
The afternoon sun beat down on the pavement as I walked into the downtown branch of Chase Bank.
The air conditioning chilled my skin. I bypassed the standard teller line and approached the private wealth management desk.
"Mrs. Vance," the branch manager greeted, standing up quickly from his cubicle. His name tag read Daniel. "We weren't expecting you today. How can I assist?"
"I need a complete security overhaul on my primary salary accounts," I told him, dropping my leather tote onto the empty chair next to me.
Daniel frowned, his fingers already flying across his keyboard. "Did you lose your debit card?"
"No. I am revoking all secondary access."
Daniel turned his monitor slightly. "You have three authorized users attached to the main checking and platinum credit lines. Mark Vance, Leo Vance, and Mia Vance."
"Remove them all."
"Just to clarify, ma'am," Daniel cautioned, lowering his voice. "Removing authorized users will immediately deactivate their physical cards."
"I understand."
"Your son's card has an active recurring charge for a gaming subscription. Your daughter's card is linked to a ride-share app."
"Cancel the cards, Daniel."
He typed a rapid sequence of commands. "Done. The secondary cards are void. Do you want to transfer the balances?"
"Leave the debt on the platinum card exactly where it is. Now, change my administrative password."
Daniel handed me a digital keypad. "Type your new pin here."
I punched in a random sequence of numbers, completely unrelated to birthdays or anniversaries. Mark wouldn't be able to guess it in a million years.
"Your accounts are fully locked down," Daniel confirmed, handing back my driver's license. "Only you can authorize withdrawals or approve charges from this moment forward."
"Thank you."
I walked out of the bank. The heavy glass doors sealed shut behind me, cutting off the quiet hum of the lobby.
I climbed into the driver's seat of my SUV and started the engine. I didn't pull out of the parking lot right away.
Instead, I opened the banking app on my phone.
The dashboard refreshed. My checking account balance sat safely behind the new firewall. The supplementary cards were listed in gray text, marked with a bold DEACTIVATED stamp.
I placed the phone in the cup holder and watched the blank screen.
Mark loved Friday afternoons. He always left the office early to entertain clients. Today, according to Mia, that entertainment involved taking Chloe shopping.
A soft ping echoed through the quiet car.
The phone screen lit up with a push notification from the fraud department.
*Transaction Declined: $14,200 at Van Cleef & Arpels. Reason: Card Terminated.*
I stared at the notification. Fourteen thousand dollars. He was trying to buy his mistress jewelry on my dime.
Ten seconds later, another notification popped up.
*Transaction Declined: $14,200 at Van Cleef & Arpels. Reason: Card Terminated.*
He was trying to swipe it again. I pictured him standing at the pristine glass counter, his face turning red as the cashier handed the plastic back to him with a polite, pitying smile. Chloe would be standing right next to him, waiting for her shiny new prize.
A third ping sounded.
*Transaction Declined: $450 at The Capital Grille. Reason: Card Terminated.*
He had given up on the jewelry and tried to pay for lunch. Denied again.
The phone started vibrating violently against the plastic console.
Mark’s contact photo flashed across the screen. He was calling.
I let it ring.
It stopped, then immediately started vibrating again.
I picked up the device and pressed the green accept button. I didn't say a word.
"Claire!" Mark hissed through the speaker, his voice tight with barely contained panic. "Did you do something to the bank accounts? My card is getting declined everywhere!"
"Is it?" I asked, keeping my tone perfectly neutral.
"Yes! I'm standing in the middle of a restaurant with important clients, and the waiter just told me my platinum card is invalid."
"That sounds embarrassing."
"Fix it!" he demanded. "Transfer the funds or unlock the card right now. You are humiliating me!"
I looked out the windshield at the busy street ahead.
"I can't authorize a charge for your mistress, Mark," I said. "The bank flagged it as fraudulent."
Dead silence stretched across the line.
"What... what did you just say?" Mark stammered.
"Van Cleef & Arpels? Really?" I asked. "I hope Chloe brought her own wallet."
I ended the call.
Before he could dial back, another text message popped onto my screen, but this one wasn't from the bank. It was from Leo.
*Mom, I'm at the baseball field. My card won't work for the team dinner. Send money NOW.*
I stared at my son's demanding text. The financial freeze had hit everyone. No *please*. No *is everything okay*. Just a fifteen-year-old barking orders at the woman who had paid for every glove, every tournament, every cleat he'd ever worn.
I typed back two words: *Ask your father.* Then I set the phone in the cup holder, pulled out of the lot, and let his entitled little world start to burn.
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