My phone rang less than two minutes later.
Daniel. Then again. Then Vanessa. I ignored both until Dad nodded toward the screen and said, “Answer it. Let them tell you who they are.” The moment I picked up, Daniel exploded. “What did you do?” he shouted. Behind him I could hear staff members, security, and Vanessa crying. “You embarrassed us!” I looked at the fraud notifications. Every declined charge had been flagged because the divorce decree terminated his authorization on my corporate accounts at exactly 5:03 p.m. “No, Daniel,” I said calmly. “You embarrassed yourself. You tried spending nearly a million dollars that wasn’t yours.” The line went silent. Then Vanessa grabbed the phone. “You ruined my birthday!” she screamed. Dad laughed softly into his coffee. “Funny,” I replied. “You didn’t seem worried about ruining my marriage.” Then I hung up. Twenty minutes later, Aurum House security escorted them to a private office while lawyers and accountants verified the unpaid charges.
The next morning became front-page gossip in circles where reputation mattered more than money. Daniel’s employer learned he had attempted to use accounts no longer authorized to him. Vanessa’s social media photos disappeared overnight. Meanwhile, I met with my attorney and finalized the last financial separation. During the review, we discovered something even better: Daniel had hidden several transactions during the divorce proceedings. The court reopened part of the settlement, and six months later he was ordered to repay a substantial amount he had concealed. On the day the ruling arrived, Dad placed the judgment papers beside my coffee and smiled. “That’s why I told you to change the PINs.” I finally understood. It had never been about bank cards. It was about closing the last door Daniel thought he could walk through. And once that door closed, everything he built on arrogance collapsed on the other side of it.