She had moved twenty-two million dollars from Daniel’s personal accounts. Framed as investments. Tax positioning. He discovered it. He planned to annul the marriage on grounds of fraud.

She claimed she hadn’t meant harm. That she’d introduced him to questionable “health consultants.” That she hadn’t known about his minor heart condition.

Whether ignorance or recklessness, the damage was real.

“I need protection,” she said finally.

“I won’t open Appendix C,” I told her. “But I won’t shield you either.”

She left smaller than she had ever seemed.

I later confirmed with the lawyer: Appendix C contained documentation of the financial transfers and investigative reports. No evidence of foul play in Daniel’s death. Only proof of manipulation.

I kept it sealed.

Instead of revenge, I built forward.

The Hartwell Innovation Grant funded scholarships and cardiac research. The money became a tool, not a symbol.

Months later, authorities began investigating Vanessa over offshore accounts. Not because of Appendix C—but because her own associates were careless.

She avoided prison through restitution, but the money was gone.

Debt replaced luxury.

Years passed.