The manila folder Madison slid across her desk felt heavier than it should have. I stared at it, my fingers trembling slightly as I reached for it.
"These are bank statements from the last six months," Madison said, her voice carrying the clinical detachment she used when delivering bad news to clients. "Nathan has been systematically transferring funds from your joint accounts into a private account under his name only."
I flipped through the pages, each transaction a small stab to my chest. Five thousand here. Ten thousand there. All adding up to a staggering sum.
"He's also been using Lewis Group connections for unauthorized business deals," Madison continued, tapping her pen against another folder. "Your father's company has been backing his ventures without proper documentation or approval."
I closed the folder, suddenly feeling sick. "How much?"
"Nearly two million dollars, Phoenix. And that's just what we can prove so far."
The room seemed to tilt slightly. Two million dollars. Our marriage. Our life together. All a calculated transaction to him.
"I need to see for myself," I said, my voice steadier than I expected.
---
The next morning, I walked into Nathan's company building with a smile plastered on my face and a story prepared about planning a surprise for our anniversary. The receptionist—a young woman who'd always been friendly to me—barely glanced up as I passed.
"Mrs. Morrison! Going to see Mr. Morrison?"
"Just heading to his office to drop off some lunch," I lied smoothly. "He's been working so hard lately."
Nathan's office was empty, but his assistant's desk was right outside. Alexa's desk. I glanced around, noting the hallway was clear before slipping behind her desk.
The drawers opened silently. The first two contained nothing but office supplies and company memos. But the third—the bottom drawer—was locked.
I'd come prepared. The bobby pin in my hair was bent just right for this purpose. Three seconds later, the lock clicked open.
Inside lay a small pharmacy bag. I pulled it out with trembling fingers and peered inside.
A pregnancy test. Positive. And a note in feminine handwriting: "Nate—We need to talk about our future. Love, Lex"
I carefully replaced everything exactly as I'd found it and locked the drawer. As I stood, I heard footsteps approaching. I quickly moved to Nathan's office door and pushed it open, as if I'd just arrived.
---
Two weeks later, I found myself on a yacht in the Hamptons, surrounded by Nathan's business associates and their wives. The champagne was flowing freely, the sun was setting over the water, and Nathan had barely left Alexa's side all evening.
I watched them from across the deck, noting how his hand lingered on her lower back, how she leaned into him when she thought no one was looking.
"I need some air," I murmured to no one in particular and slipped away toward the quieter stern of the boat.
I hadn't planned to eavesdrop. But as I rounded the corner, Nathan's voice carried clearly over the water.
"The Lewis Group has at least three more investments they're planning," he was saying, his voice low and eager. "Once I've secured those deals, we'll have everything we need."
"And then?" Alexa's voice was eager, almost greedy.
"Then I file for divorce. Phoenix will get what she deserves—which is nothing."
I pressed myself against the railing, my heart pounding so loudly I feared they might hear it.
"She actually believes I love her," Nathan continued, laughing softly. "As if I could ever love someone so...ordinary. The way she looks at me sometimes—like I'm some kind of hero."
"She's clueless," Alexa agreed. "And her father is so proud of his little girl marrying such a 'successful' man."
"The old fool has no idea I've been using his connections to build my empire. By the time he figures it out, it'll be too late."
I bit my lip until I tasted blood, forcing back the tears that threatened to spill over. This wasn't heartbreak anymore. This was cold, calculated fury.
---
"Darling," I said to Nathan that night as we drove home, "I've been thinking about your company's annual gala."
"Hmm?" He seemed distracted, probably still thinking about Alexa.
"I'd love to help plan it this year. As a surprise."
He glanced at me, surprise evident in his features. "You want to plan the gala?"
"I do. I think the theme should be 'Gratitude and Loyalty.'" I kept my voice light, innocent. "Don't you think that would be perfect?"
A slow smile spread across his face—the smile I once thought was meant only for me.
"Phoenix, that's brilliant. Absolutely brilliant."
As he pulled into our driveway, I smiled back at him, a plan already forming in my mind. The gala would indeed be unforgettable—just not in the way he imagined.
Behind my smile, I was already calculating how many people would attend. How many witnesses there would be when I exposed Nathan Morrison for exactly what he was.
The Lewis Group headquarters towered over Midtown Manhattan, a gleaming monument to my father's legacy. I'd grown up in its shadow, but today I was walking through its doors with a purpose beyond family pride.
My heels clicked against the marble floor as I made my way to the executive elevator. Employees nodded respectfully as I passed—the CEO's daughter, Nathan Morrison's wife. How many of them knew what Nathan really was?
"Miss Phoenix." The receptionist outside my father's office stood as I approached. "He's expecting you."
My father looked up from his desk, his silver hair catching the morning light. Richard Lewis had built an empire from nothing, his handshake worth more than most people's signatures. But when he saw me, his expression softened.
"Phoenix." He rose, circling the massive desk to embrace me. "You look tired, sweetheart."
"I am tired," I admitted, sinking into the leather chair across from him. "But not for the reasons you might think."
I placed Madison's folder on his desk and watched his expression change as he opened it. The documents inside told a story of betrayal in black and white—bank statements, transfer records, emails between Nathan and his partners discussing unauthorized use of Lewis Group connections.
"Jesus Christ," my father muttered, his face darkening as he flipped through page after page. "This son of a bitch."
"He's been planning this for months," I said, my voice steadier than I expected. "Using our marriage, our family name, our resources—all while seeing another woman."
My father's hands trembled slightly as he closed the folder. "What do you want to do?"
"I want you to pull every investment, every connection, every piece of support from his company," I said. "But not yet."
His eyebrow raised. "You have something specific in mind."
"The annual gala is in three weeks. I'm planning it this year."
A slow smile spread across his face—the same smile I'd inherited, the one that meant trouble for someone. "Perfect timing."
---
"Another cup?" Madison asked, pushing her mug toward me as we sat in her office well past midnight.
I shook my head, eyes fixed on the laptop screen where another email had just loaded. "Look at this one."
The message was from Nathan to Alexa, dated two weeks ago:
"The old man signed off on the Singapore deal without even reading the fine print. Phoenix's family name opens doors, but her father's arrogance keeps them wide open. We'll be set for life after this."
Madison whistled low. "That's practically a confession."
"Add it to the dossier," I said, making a note in the growing file we'd compiled over the past week.
Madison had transformed her office into our war room. Financial records covered one wall, emails and text messages another. A timeline of Nathan's deception stretched across her whiteboard, each entry meticulously documented.
"We've got enough to destroy him financially," Madison said, organizing the papers into neat piles. "But you wanted more."
"I want everything," I replied, my fingers tracing over a bank statement showing another unauthorized transfer. "I want him to lose everything he values."
Madison nodded, her expression grim but determined. "Then let's make sure we have every angle covered."
---
"He's meeting her at the Four Seasons again," the private investigator reported, sliding a manila envelope across the table in the dimly lit café where we'd agreed to meet.
I opened it slowly, steeling myself for what I knew I'd find inside.
Photographs spilled out—Nathan and Alexa entering a hotel room, their arms around each other. Another showed them at dinner, his hand caressing hers across the table. The final one was the most damning: them kissing in the elevator, his hands tangled in her hair.
"There's more," the investigator said, handing me a small recording device. "Audio from their last meeting."
I pressed play, my stomach churning as Nathan's voice filled the space between us.
"After the gala, we'll have everything we need," he was saying. "Phoenix suspects nothing. She's too busy planning her little party to notice what's happening right under her nose."
Alexa's laugh was cruel, cutting. "And she actually believes you love her."
"Love is such a useful tool," Nathan replied. "Especially with someone so desperate for it."
I stopped the recording, my hand trembling slightly as I slipped it back into the envelope.
"Thank you," I said to the investigator. "I have everything I need now."
As I walked out into the bright afternoon sunlight, I felt something cold and hard crystallize in my chest. Nathan had no idea what was coming for him. He thought me clueless, desperate, ordinary.
He was about to learn how wrong he was.
The gala was approaching. The stage was set. And I had all the evidence I needed to bring Nathan Morrison's house of cards crashing down around him.