PART 2: THE WOMAN HE THOUGHT HE HAD ERASED
The first slide was a photograph of us ten years earlier.
Marcus and me in a cramped apartment with a broken lamp, bare walls, and a pizza box open on the floor between us. He was twenty-nine, hair messy, eyes alive with reckless ambition. I was twenty-seven, wearing paint-splattered jeans and one of his old shirts, my head resting on his shoulder.
We looked poor.
We looked exhausted.
We looked happy.
“This was us,” I said.
My voice did not shake.
“Before the mansion. Before the investors. Before magazine covers. Before Marcus learned to call our dream his company.”
In the courtroom, Marcus stared at the image like it was an accusation.
It was.
“He had an idea,” I continued. “A data compression algorithm that could reduce enterprise storage costs. He had talent. Vision. Confidence. What he did not have was money, branding, a user interface, or anyone willing to stay awake with him while he built it.”
The slide changed.
A bank transfer.
$50,000 from Stella Miller.
My grandmother’s inheritance.
Deposited into Wells Innovations LLC.
“I gave him everything I had.”
The judge leaned forward.
“Not as a loan. As a partner. I designed the first logo. Built the first website. Created the pitch deck. Sat through all-nighters debugging the interface because Marcus could build brilliant systems that no normal person wanted to use.”
A quiet ripple moved through the gallery.
Another slide.
Marcus asleep on a beanbag chair beneath a whiteboard full of code.
Me painting the company name on the first office door.
A cheap bottle of champagne between us after our first seed round.
I let the photos sit.
Not long enough to become sentimental.
Long enough to hurt.
“For five years, we built Wells Innovations together.”
The next slide showed the shift.
Red carpets.
Tech conferences.
Marcus on a magazine cover.
Marcus shaking hands with venture capitalists.
Marcus standing alone under a headline: THE NEW ARCHITECT OF DATA INTELLIGENCE.
I appeared in some photos too, but at the edges.
A wife.
A smile.
A dress.
An accessory polished enough to stand beside him and silent enough not to complicate the legend.
“The more successful he became,” I said, “the smaller I became in the story.”
Text messages from Marcus to friends, investors, journalists.
Huge day for me.
I finally closed Series B.
I built this from nothing.
My vision is finally being recognized.
“I did not resent his success,” I said. “I loved him. I wanted him to win. But I did not understand then that a man who erases you from the story of how he rose may one day erase you from everything else.”
Marcus’s jaw tightened.
Julian whispered something to him.
Chloe looked at her hands.
Good.
The next slide displayed a calendar.
October 17.
“Our eighth wedding anniversary.”
I paused.
“Marcus told me he was flying to Singapore for an emergency board meeting. He sent white roses. He apologized. He said he hated missing our dinner.”
A screenshot from Chloe Sterling’s public Instagram.
Chloe in a white bikini, sitting at a beachside table, clinking champagne glasses with someone just out of frame.
Caption: Paradise with my man. Cabo. Anniversary surprise.
Geotag: Cabo San Lucas.
Date: October 17.
A low murmur moved through the courtroom.
Chloe’s face drained.
Marcus looked at Julian, and Julian looked back with something close to fury.
I continued.
“I did not see this post until months later. At the time, I believed my husband was working. I went to dinner alone. I wore the blue dress he liked. I told the waiter to take the second place setting away after forty minutes.”
My throat tightened.
I stopped.
Breathed.
Continued.
“When he came home, he kissed my forehead and said he missed me. He smelled like sunscreen and someone else’s perfume.”
The next slide was titled
THE FLAGS
.
Phone logs.
Late-night calls.
Hotel charges.
Jewelry purchases I never received.
Dinners in cities where Marcus claimed to be in meetings.
A receipt for a convertible leased in Chloe’s name, paid through a corporate consulting vendor.
“He told me I was imagining things,” I said. “He said pregnancy made me emotional. He said I needed rest. He said I had always been too sensitive.”
The judge wrote steadily.
Sarah stood motionless, one hand on the table.
“But the affair was not the worst part.”
Marcus looked up.
There it was.
Fear.
Small, but real.
“The worst part was what he did after I started asking questions.”
The slide changed to a legal document.
Joint investment authorization.
Sole signing authority transferred to Marcus Wells.
My signature at the bottom.
“He told me the company faced temporary cash flow pressure. He said our assets needed to be protected. He said it would reduce stress on me during the pregnancy.”
I looked directly into the camera.
“I signed because I trusted my husband.”
The courtroom seemed to hold its breath.
“Mr. Davis presented my spending as reckless. He said I ran up debts. He said I bought luxury goods. He showed the numbers, but not the names attached to them.”
The next slide appeared.
Blackthorn Digital Forensics — $15,000.
J.D. Harding & Associates, Private Investigations — $25,000.
SecureCom Residential Systems — $10,000.
Independent counsel retainer — $18,500.
“I was not buying shoes,” I said. “I was buying the truth.”
Julian stood.
“Objection, Your Honor. The witness is editorializing.”
Judge Thompson did not look at him.
“Overruled.”
“I hired investigators because I realized my husband was not only cheating. He was building a case against me. Every tear became proof of instability. Every question became paranoia. Every fear became a weapon.”
The next slide showed a still frame from our home security camera.
Marcus at the front door.
Chloe in his arms.
His mouth on hers.
The timestamp read 6:15 a.m.
“Hours after this,” I said, “Marcus came upstairs, kissed me while I was half-asleep, touched my belly, and told me he was heading to the office early.”
I stopped again.
Not because I was weak.
Because even prepared pain remains pain.
On the screen, the frozen image of his betrayal glowed too brightly.
“He was living a separate life funded by our shared wealth,” I said. “And while he did it, he told me I was unstable for noticing the shape of my own destruction.”
Chloe began blinking rapidly.
Marcus stared at the table.
The next slide was a network diagram.
“Our home system,” I said.
At that, Marcus’s head snapped up.
His face changed completely.
Not angry.
Terrified.
“Marcus designed it himself,” I continued. “He called it Fort Knox. He loved showing off the way every device backed up automatically to the central server every twenty-four hours. His phone. His laptop. My phone. Everything.”
Judge Thompson looked from the screen to Marcus.
I highlighted a small red point on the diagram.