Six months later, the contrast between my reality and theirs was absolute, stark, and brutally poetic.
The legal and financial ruin of Beatrice and Chloe was a spectacular, highly publicized catastrophe. In a bleak, aggressively fluorescent-lit federal bankruptcy court, Beatrice—now looking ten years older, hollowed out, and wearing cheap, ill-fitting, state-issued clothing—sobbed openly as a judge ordered the total, uncompromising liquidation of her personal retirement accounts, her jewelry, and the sale of the massive colonial estate to satisfy a fraction of the twelve million dollars she had legally assumed.
Chloe fared no better. Stripped of the illusion of wealth, she was evicted from her luxury apartment. Completely abandoned by the wealthy social circle she had tried so desperately to infiltrate, she was forced to move into a cramped, noisy, low-income apartment on the outskirts of the city, facing a mountain of debt she could never hope to repay in her lifetime.
They were drowning in the exact abyss they had so eagerly tried to push me into.
Miles away from that miserable courtroom, brilliant, golden afternoon sunlight streamed through the massive, floor-to-ceiling bay windows of a penthouse office suite in a towering glass skyscraper in the center of the financial district.
I stood in front of the window, a warm cup of Earl Grey tea in my hand.
I was wearing a bespoke, razor-sharp navy blue suit that fit me flawlessly. I didn’t look like a grieving widow. I radiated a fierce, untouchable, and incredibly powerful beauty born of absolute freedom and hard-won sovereignty.
I had used the substantial, legally protected savings I had shielded via the postnuptial agreement to launch my own independent forensic accounting and financial consulting firm. The highly publicized downfall of the Vance estate, and rumors of my brilliant, tactical execution of the liabilities, had instantly cemented my reputation in the city as a ruthless, brilliant strategist. Clients were practically banging down my door.
I turned away from the window and looked toward the corner of my expansive office.