The sentence kept pounding in my head as I stepped out of the glass doors of the Central Magistrates’ Court in Singapore with one battered laptop bag and two stolen years of my life behind me.

PART 3
The night of their engagement party at Capella Singapore, I walked in uninvited.
I wore a simple black dress I bought from Mustafa Centre — nothing flashy, nothing that screamed revenge. Just enough to look like a woman who had survived and was no longer hiding.
The ballroom was filled with Singapore’s architecture elite, developers, and journalists. When I entered, the room didn’t go silent — but the energy shifted. People stared. Some whispered. Richard, standing near the stage with Clara on his arm, saw me and froze for half a second before his professional smile slid back into place.
Clara’s hand tightened on his arm. My mother’s brooch glinted under the chandelier light.
I walked straight up to them.
Richard spoke first, voice low and controlled.
“Elena. This isn’t the time.”
I looked at him — really looked. The man I once trusted with my life.
“You’re right,” I said calmly. “There was never a right time for the truth, was there?”
I handed him a thick envelope.
Inside were copies of everything: the falsified medical records, the money trail, the forged change orders, and screenshots of Clara’s Maldives photos taken right after her “miscarriage.”
“I’m not here to ruin your party,” I said quietly. “I’m here to give you a choice. Sign the documents transferring my shares back to me at fair market value… or I hand everything to the Monetary Authority of Singapore and the Straits Times tomorrow morning.”
Clara’s face went pale.
Richard’s jaw clenched. For the first time in years, I saw real fear in his eyes.
“You would destroy the company?” he whispered. “After everything we built?”
“No, Richard. You already tried to destroy it when you decided I was an obstacle. I’m just giving you the chance to save what’s left.”
The silence between us stretched.
Then came the small, perfect detail I will never forget.
Richard’s hand trembled as he reached for the pen.
Not from rage.
But because, in that moment, he finally understood I was no longer the woman he could bully or erase.
He signed.
Clara removed my mother’s brooch with shaking fingers and placed it in my palm without looking at me. I took it without a word.
Three months later, Vertex Design underwent a quiet audit. Richard stepped down as Managing Director. I regained control of my shares and brought in new partners who actually valued ethics.
I never destroyed the company.
But I made sure it would never belong to someone who would burn a person alive just to feel taller.
Some nights I still sit on the rooftop of the brownstone-equivalent — my restored shophouse in Joo Chiat — holding my mother’s brooch, looking out at the city lights.
I don’t feel victorious.
I feel… whole.
Because I finally understood the most important truth:
The strongest revenge isn’t destruction.
It’s refusing to stay broken.
END.

See also  They Fired Her From the Family Company—Thirty Minutes Later, the Whole Business Started Falling Apart

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

© 2026 kinhmatquangnhan | All rights reserved