It wasn’t a blurry, paparazzi-style photo. It was a crisp, high-definition security still from the lobby of the Grand Meridian Hotel. It showed Richard, dressed in his custom tuxedo, walking toward the elevators with his hand placed low on Sloane’s bare back. The timestamp in the corner read exactly three months ago.
Miriam clicked again.
A photo from a private villa in St. Barts. Richard and Sloane on a balcony. Click. A bank transfer wire. $500,000 to Kensington Strategies. Click. A lease agreement for the Tribeca loft, signed by Richard, naming Sloane as the primary resident.
“Objection!” Thorne roared, leaping to his feet, his chair scraping violently against the floor. “These documents are unverified! This is a gross invasion of privacy!”
“They were left on a shared family cloud drive, Your Honor,” Miriam countered smoothly. “My client had full legal access. We also have the corporate ledger showing Mr. Sterling used Sterling Capital’s executive security budget to book the St. Barts trip, effectively commingling company funds with marital infidelity.”
Sloane stopped laughing. She looked at the screen, then at the furious faces of Richard’s legal team, and finally at Richard.
“Richard…” she whispered, her voice trembling. “What is she talking about?”
He did not look at her. He couldn’t. His eyes were glued to the screen, watching his carefully constructed empire of lies being dismantled piece by piece.
For the first time in six years, Richard truly saw me. He didn’t see the quiet, manageable wife. He didn’t see the pregnant woman he had mocked and discarded. He saw the auditor. He saw the woman who had spent months patiently weaving his own arrogance into a noose.
“You followed me?” he hissed across the aisle, his face twisting into a mask of pure, unadulterated hatred.
“No, Richard,” I said softly, my voice carrying just enough for him to hear. “I just did the math.”
The gallery erupted into furious, hushed whispers. Eleanor Sterling stood up, her face flushed with rage. “This is a private family matter!” she declared, her voice trembling with aristocratic fury. “Shut off that screen!”
Judge Harrison banged his gavel. The sharp crack silenced the room instantly. “Madam, you will sit down and remain quiet, or I will have the bailiffs remove you from my courtroom.”
Eleanor sat down slowly, looking as though she had been physically struck.
Thorne scrambled to salvage the situation. “Your Honor, even assuming these allegations are true, the clause is punitive and entirely unenforceable! You cannot strip a CEO of his voting control based on a marital dispute!”
“The clause was designed to protect the institutional integrity of Sterling Capital from exactly this type of reckless, financially destructive behavior,” Miriam argued. “And because Ms. Sterling is carrying the only legitimate heir currently recognized under the succession agreement, the contract stipulates she will serve as sole trustee, with full voting authority, until the child reaches twenty-five.”
I watched Sloane’s face contort. She shot to her feet, ignoring the bailiff’s warning glare.
“Only legitimate heir?” Sloane snapped, her voice shrill and piercing. “Richard, what does she mean? Tell them!”
The courtroom froze. The air grew suddenly thick and suffocating.
Richard closed his eyes. The vein in his temple throbbed wildly.
read more in next page