“Because Julian used their personal names on the fraudulent board of directors for his shell companies to hide his tracks,” I continued, watching the paper slide out of the machine, “they just legally, formally, and voluntarily assumed personal, joint liability for his entire twelve-million-dollar criminal debt.”

I picked up the freshly printed document. It was a single, comprehensive piece of paper: the certified, undeniable federal audit of Julian Vance’s actual estate, complete with the list of hostile creditors and the staggering backlog of unpaid federal taxes he had been dodging for years.

“Beatrice wanted to protect her son’s legacy,” I said, my voice dropping to a register as cold and uncompromising as liquid nitrogen. “It is only right that she gets exactly what she asked for.”

I placed the single document into a crisp, unmarked manila folder and set it carefully in my briefcase.

I finished my tea, completely, profoundly unbothered by the fact that across town, at that very moment, Beatrice was currently sitting in the study of the colonial mansion, sipping expensive scotch and eagerly hiring an interior designer to remodel a house that the bank was already preparing to foreclose on.

They were dancing on top of a landmine, and they had just proudly, aggressively begged me to hand them the detonator.

4. The Detonation

A month later. The final probate hearing.

The atmosphere in the courtroom was significantly different from the preliminary hearing. The plaintiff’s table was practically vibrating with a suffocating, triumphant arrogance.

Beatrice and Chloe arrived fifteen minutes late, making a grand, theatrical entrance. They were dripping in brand-new, ostentatious designer clothes and heavy gold jewelry—items they had undoubtedly purchased on credit against the anticipated inheritance they believed was mere hours away from clearing into their accounts. Chloe rubbed her pregnant belly, smirking at the gallery, playing the tragic but wealthy widow-to-be.

I sat at the respondent’s table, wearing the same simple grey suit, my posture identical to the last hearing. The manila folder rested quietly under my hands.

Judge Harrison entered the courtroom, taking his seat at the bench. He looked over the final transfer documents submitted by Beatrice’s high-priced legal team.