I refused to show it.
“What did Richard tell you?”
“He said Robert was delirious. He said dying men imagine enemies everywhere. He told me the compassionate thing was letting him rest.”
The table between us suddenly felt miles wide.
“Did he tell you to give the morphine?”
Diana covered her mouth.
“That’s not fair.”
“Neither is lying about a dead man.”
Now the tears spilled freely, but tears had long stopped impressing me.
I placed an envelope on the table.
“You will return the money. You will sign an affidavit confirming Richard encouraged you to raise false suspicion after losing access to my assets. You will confirm I had absolutely no involvement in my father’s medication. If you refuse, Daniel sends the file to the district attorney, the medical board, and the trustee overseeing your settlement.”
“You’d ruin me.”
“You tried to ruin my father.”
She signed by five o’clock.
But Emily was different.
I found her in an East Village coffee shop with a suitcase beside her chair and hatred hidden behind oversized sunglasses.
“You look tired,” I said.
She laughed. “You look lonely.”
“Richard told me the smear campaign about my father was your idea.”
Emily slowly removed her sunglasses. “Richard talks too much when he’s afraid.”
“You planted the idea with Diana.”
“I reminded her about things she already knew.”
“You mean things you distorted.”
Emily smiled.
“You stole my future, Clara. The penthouse. The title. The life. Everything I was supposed to have.”
“You were my assistant.”
“I was your shadow,” she hissed. “Do you know what it’s like standing next to someone who has everything while being expected to feel grateful for scraps?”
“You chose Richard.”
“I chose the door he promised to unlock.”
“And now?”
Her smile turned glacial.
“Now I make sure you never sleep peacefully again without wondering what really happened in that room.”
I wanted to slap her.
Instead, I stood up.
“Enjoy the suitcase,” I said.
But as I disappeared into the afternoon crowd, her words followed me like smoke.
Not because I believed her.
Because once doubt enters, it never bothers knocking again.
Part 4
Richard and Emily filed first.
Their complaint was a masterpiece of fiction. I was painted as unstable, vindictive, emotionally abusive—a billionaire ice queen using corporate power to destroy two innocent lovers. Emily claimed wrongful termination. Richard alleged financial coercion. Both demanded damages for emotional distress.
The headlines were exactly what they wanted.
SCOTT HEIRESS FREEZES HUSBAND’S LIFE AFTER LOVE TRIANGLE.
CEO CLAIMS WIFE’S REVENGE WAS “PSYCHOLOGICAL WARFARE.”
SISTER VS. SISTER IN BILLION-DOLLAR DIVORCE.
Daniel called before I finished reading the filing.
“They’re not trying to win,” he said. “They’re trying to make things ugly enough that you’ll pay them to disappear.”
“Then we make it uglier.”
“Clara.”
“They opened the door to my emotional state. We show exactly what caused it.”
He understood immediately.
Within forty-eight hours, we filed our response. Attached were terrace security stills, the audio recording of Richard and Emily plotting to force me out, the offshore payment to Diana, the security logs from the night my father died, and the medication discrepancies.
We requested depositions for Richard, Emily, Diana, and Dr. Alister Evans, my father’s physician.
The emergency hearing took place in a wood-paneled courtroom where Judge Eleanor Ramos looked like she had spent thirty years disappointing liars professionally.
Richard sat at the plaintiff’s table in a navy suit, thinner but not humbled. Emily wore a plain gray dress, hair tied back, no jewelry—the costume of innocence.
I sat beside Daniel and refused to look at either of them.
Judge Ramos reviewed the filings, then lowered her glasses.
“This appears less like divorce litigation and more like corporate assassination mixed with family trauma.”
Nobody spoke.
Richard’s lawyer argued my father’s death was irrelevant.
Daniel stood.
“They made my client’s mental state central to their claims. They accused her of instability and cruelty. We intend to prove the plaintiffs deliberately orchestrated a campaign to destabilize her, including weaponizing the death of her father and concealing facts regarding Mr. Scott’s presence in Robert Scott’s apartment the night he died.”
Richard’s head snapped toward me.
For the first time, I saw genuine fear.
Judge Ramos permitted the depositions.
Limited. Protected. But permitted.
Richard confronted me outside the courtroom.
“You’re dragging your father’s corpse into this,” he snarled.
“No,” I said. “I’m dragging your lies into daylight.”
He stepped closer. “You don’t want to know everything.”
“That,” I replied, “is where you are wrong.”
Emily’s deposition came first.
For three hours she performed innocence flawlessly. She knew nothing about offshore transfers. She never manipulated Diana. She never conspired to undermine me.
Then Daniel played the gala courtyard recording.
Her face froze.
Then he introduced messages recovered from Richard’s old corporate phone. Not deleted. Archived.
Emily: Diana is soft. Push the guilt angle.
Richard: She’ll talk if she thinks Clara abandoned Robert.
Emily: Then make her remember it that way.