“I saw the accounts.”
Richard became still.
Not in a dramatic way. Not like a guilty man in a film. Only a slight pause in the movement of his hand as he removed his cufflink.
“What accounts?”
“The foundation transfers. Sabrina’s apartment. The car. The jewelry.”
His face did not break at once. Richard was far too practiced for that. His first reaction was indignation.
“You went through my private documents?”
“They weren’t private,” Clara said. “They were stolen.”
His eyes sharpened. “Be careful.”
The old Clara would have recoiled.
This Clara did not.
“You brought your mistress to our foundation gala while I stood there carrying your child,” she said quietly. “You told me to smile. You told me not to embarrass you.”
Richard’s jaw hardened. “This emotional performance is beneath you.”
“No,” Clara said. “What’s beneath me is funding your affair with my father’s legacy.”
There it was.
The first fracture.
It showed at the edge of his mouth, in the abrupt tightness beneath one eye.
“You have no idea what you’re talking about.”
“I do.”
“You’re pregnant and unstable.”
Clara rose slowly, one hand braced on the table, the other beneath her belly.
Richard smiled then, but the smile had turned narrow.
“You think anyone will believe you? You barely leave this apartment. You cry at charity events. You faint in public. I can make this look like stress, Clara. I can make it look like confusion.”
A chill moved through her.
Not fear.
Recognition.
This was the man beneath the tuxedo. Beneath the speeches. Beneath the foundation portraits and donor dinners. A man who had already prepared the words he would use to bury her.
Clara studied him for a long moment.
Then she said, “Try.”
He gave one short laugh. “There she is. The dramatic little heiress.”
“No,” Clara said. “There I am.”
The following week unfolded with the accuracy of a legal blade.
Evelyn’s team froze three accounts before Richard realized it. Sealed packets reached the foundation board at eight on Monday morning. By noon, Richard’s assistant had stopped taking his calls. By two, the board chairman had requested an emergency meeting. By four, Richard’s credit card was declined at the restaurant where Sabrina sat waiting with a shopping bag by her feet.
At five, Clara stood inside the Donovan Foundation boardroom in a charcoal maternity dress, her hair pinned low, her face pale but steady.
The room smelled of coffee, paper, and panic.
Richard arrived ten minutes late.
This time, Sabrina was not with him.
He stopped when he saw Clara sitting beside Evelyn March.
“Clara,” he said, forcing a smile. “This is unnecessary.”
The chairman, Samuel Price, looked worn down. “Sit down, Richard.”
“I will not be ambushed by my wife’s pregnancy emotions.”