I asked questions. Quiet ones.
I learned Thomas had pledged jointly owned assets against risky loans. I learned he had used company funds for personal gifts. I learned he had forged my electronic consent on three transfers while I was under anesthesia.
That was his first mistake.
His second was forgetting that Grant Holdings had not begun with his money.
It had begun with mine.
My father had left me a small manufacturing warehouse and a trust. Thomas brought ambition. I brought collateral, credit, and the first payroll check that kept his dream alive.
Decades later, when he began acting like a king, I quietly moved.
With Diane’s help, I separated inherited assets from marital ones. I revoked old authorizations. I transferred personal accounts into my name. I froze signature privileges on trusts he had been treating like private cash drawers.
Every action was legal.
Every document was signed before witnesses.
Every trap was one he had built himself.
Thomas did not know any of this.
He was too busy celebrating.
He moved into the downtown penthouse with Brooke and hosted a party two weeks after leaving me. Photographs appeared online: champagne, influencers, Thomas kissing Brooke under city lights.
The caption read: “New beginnings.”
My grandson sent it to me, furious.
I sent back one sentence: “Let them dance.”
Then Thomas got reckless.