Beatrice lunged for the microphone.
I reached it first.
“For years,” I said, “you called me damaged, ungrateful, and useless. Tonight, you turned my medical trauma into a joke. So let’s discuss what you were hoping no one would see.”
Maya handed the attorneys three folders.
The first attorney approached Beatrice. “You are being served notice of civil action for identity theft, fraud, and misappropriation of funds.”
The second faced Chloe. “You are being placed on immediate administrative suspension pending a criminal investigation into payroll theft.”
Chloe laughed too loudly. “You can’t suspend me. I work for Vance Meridian Hospitality.”
Liam took the microphone from my hand.
“I know,” he said.
He turned toward the guests. “My name is Liam Vance. I am the founder and majority owner of Vance Meridian Industries.”
Beatrice stared at him. “No. The owner is some old investor in Boston.”
“That story was useful,” Liam said. “It showed me how people behaved when they believed power was absent.”
He gestured toward the screen. The humiliating slideshow vanished. In its place appeared bank transfers, forged signatures, false invoices, and internal emails.
Chloe’s voice cracked. “Those are private.”
“They are evidence,” Maya replied.
Liam addressed the room. “Anyone who laughed at my wife but committed no crime may leave with their shame. Anyone employed by my companies who participated in fraud, harassment, or concealment has already been terminated.”
Beatrice’s husband checked his screen and whispered, “My access is gone.”
Chloe stared at hers. “You froze my accounts.”
“The court did,” I said. “This morning.”
Beatrice turned on me with naked hatred. “After everything I did for you?”
“You mean after using my identity, stealing my money, and blaming me for surviving?”
“I raised you!”
“You controlled me.”
She lifted her hand.
Liam stepped between us.
Security moved forward.
Police officers entered through the ballroom doors. Chloe was arrested for payroll theft and destruction of records. Beatrice and her husband were charged weeks later after investigators found more than two million dollars in fraudulent contracts and hidden transfers.
The amended fire report proved their company had installed illegal fabric walls that trapped smoke and blocked the exit. Their insurer sued. Their business collapsed. Their house was sold. Their friends disappeared.
Six months later, Liam and I returned to the restored ballroom.
We had purchased it after foreclosure and converted half the property into a rehabilitation center for burn survivors. The other half hosted weddings free of charge for firefighters and emergency workers.
On opening day, I stood before a mirror without makeup covering my scars.
Liam came behind me and kissed the tight skin near my temple.
“Still think I married beneath me?” he asked.
I smiled. “You married the woman who carried you out of hell.”
Outside, survivors and their families filled the garden with music.
Beatrice sent one letter asking for forgiveness and money.
I returned it unopened.
Then I took Liam’s hand and walked into the sunlight.