Jonathan felt sick.

The Ocean’s Tear had belonged to his late wife, Margaret Reed. Only one person outside the immediate family knew its details: her estranged cousin, Victor Hale—a man long believed to be dead.
He wasn’t.
Investigators discovered Victor had been living abroad under an alias and working with a law firm known for exploiting inheritance loopholes. Jonathan’s lawyers uncovered an archaic clause in Margaret’s family trust: if the direct heir were deemed incapable, the estate could pass to the nearest male relative.
Emily had been the target all along.
Laura was arrested days later while attempting to flee the country. She confessed everything. Victor had hired her to drug Emily, sabotage Jonathan’s guardianship, and trigger a legal claim.
Victor was captured shortly afterward.
The trial was brutal but decisive. Evidence was overwhelming. The clause was ruled obsolete. Victor received twenty years in prison. Laura was sentenced to ten.
Emily testified remotely, calmly stating she wanted her father to remain her guardian.
Justice held.
Life slowly returned to the Reed mansion. The cameras remained, but Jonathan no longer relied on them alone. He devoted himself fully to Emily, knowing now that real wealth was never money or power—but the fierce, unbreakable love that had saved them both.