“According to these documents, the respondent transferred one hundred percent of her founder equity, intellectual property, and controlling interest in the company into the irrevocable trust prior to execution of this agreement. The filing is timestamped one hour before she signed the postnuptial contract.”

Caleb’s face emptied.

“She can’t do that,” he said.

“She did,” Judge Holloway replied. “Legally. And according to the language you drafted yourself, you waived any future claim to trust assets in all forms.”

“That wasn’t the intent—”

“The intent,” she said, “is irrelevant when the language is this clear and you are, by your own repeated declaration, an experienced attorney.”

Then she looked directly at him and said the line I will hear for the rest of my life:

“You overplayed your hand.”

And then:

“You get nothing.”

For one perfect second, that alone was enough.

Then Martin stood with the second file.

He laid it out cleanly:

The condo.
The mistress.
The transfers from joint accounts.
The fake invoices.
The shell company.
The under-oath lies in Caleb’s deposition.
The undeclared offshore money.
The fraudulent concealment.
The dissipation of marital assets.
The perjury.