For years, he had built a version of me that painted me as unstable and unreliable. Everything depended on no one questioning his story. I stood in court and said calmly, “This is no longer just a divorce case. It is about the truth.” Alexander dismissed it instantly as theatrics, confident I had nothing.
My lawyer, Priya Shah, stepped forward without hesitation. She didn’t argue—she revealed. The first documents appeared on the screen, then more followed. Photographs, financial records, internal messages, and agreements filled the courtroom display. Each one weakened the version of reality Alexander had controlled for years.
The room grew quieter with every new piece of evidence. Reporters stopped writing casually and started focusing fully. The atmosphere shifted from routine hearing to something far more serious. Alexander still smiled at first, but it no longer reached his eyes.
Then came the final document—the ownership agreement for Vale Meridian Holdings. It confirmed the truth I had known all along. The company belonged to a trust created by my late father. Alexander had managed it, but never owned it-
