Not the nervous laugh of someone who had misjudged the room. This was full-bodied, smug, theatrical. The kind of laugh a man gives when he thinks the ending has already been written in his favor. It rang off the marble walls of the courthouse in downtown Charlotte and made people in the gallery turn toward him.
Caleb had always loved an audience.
He loved one most when he believed he was winning.
He stood at the petitioner’s table in a navy suit tailored so sharply it looked sculpted onto him, one hand resting on a neat stack of exhibits, the other toying with the button of his jacket as if he were already taking a victory lap. He looked straight at Judge Diane Holloway, smiled with the easy arrogance of a man who had spent years being rewarded for overreach, and demanded more than half of everything I had built.
Not half of what we had created together.
Not half of a normal marital estate.
He wanted half of my company—valued in the press at twelve million dollars—and half of the trust my late father had left me. The one asset in my life that had never belonged to anyone else. The one thing my family had never managed to get their hands on.