I picked up the pen.

Read nothing.

Signed everything.

Every page. Every initial line. Every clause.

Julian watched with the serene satisfaction of a man convinced he had just pulled off a masterpiece. When I handed the folder back, he kissed my hand in front of them all.

The room practically glowed with their victory.

They drank to it.

They toasted “protection,” “family,” “new beginnings,” and whatever other lies made their greed feel elegant.

Later, alone in my office while they laughed in the next room, I logged into the registry one last time and looked at the trust transfer confirmations. The documents glowed cold and final on the screen.

My father had protected me from beyond the grave.

And Julian had helped.

A month later, he filed for divorce.

He had me served in the middle of a board meeting.

One of the junior legal staffers from the service company came to the reception desk at my office, asked for me by name, and when I stepped out into the corridor, handed me the packet in front of my CFO, my general counsel, and two investors who had flown in from New York.

I looked at the papers. Looked at the server. Signed the acknowledgment.