The trust had always existed as a kind of emotional shelter in my mind—a final act of protection from the one parent who knew the world would ask me for everything and call me selfish when I hesitated. That morning, it became a legal bunker.
I signed papers for two straight hours.
With every signature, the company moved farther from Julian’s reach.
By 9:14 a.m., according to the filing confirmation on screen, the transfer was complete. My founder shares no longer sat in my personal name. The patents, code base, algorithms, and ownership interests were all held by the trust.
I sat back in the leather chair and let out a breath I felt in my spine.
“Legally clean,” the trust attorney said. “Irrevocable. Timed, filed, and cross-referenced.”
Elias nodded. “Then let him bring you the noose.”
Julian, meanwhile, kept playing his role to perfection.
For the next week, he was especially attentive. More affectionate. More solicitous. He ordered dinner in, asked if I was sleeping enough, offered to handle “all the unpleasant legal side” of success. He treated me the way men treat women they are about to rob: with softness so calculated it becomes insulting.
Then Trent came to my office.