“They handed you an opportunity,” she said calmly.
I blinked in disbelief.
“Being forced out of my home is an opportunity?”
She folded her hands.
“Witnesses, hospital records, written threats, and a business full of questionable finances,” she explained. “Your husband believed he was controlling the story. Instead, he documented his own downfall.”
Over the next two weeks I stopped crying and started organizing.
Old emails were saved.
Financial statements were downloaded.
Company records from the years I helped with accounting were copied carefully.
Then Colin made another mistake.
One evening my phone lit up with a message.
If you fight me on this, he wrote, I’ll make sure you and those girls walk away with nothing.
Marissa smiled when she read it.
“Threats in writing,” she said quietly. “That’s very useful.”
Soon after, one of Colin’s cousins sent me photographs from the dinner.
In one image I stood near the doorway with tears on my face while Colin gripped my arm and my father-in-law pushed me toward the hallway.