Then Vanessa’s voice changed, sharp and furious. “You’re recording me, aren’t you?”

Kevin didn’t answer.

“You’re just like him,” she hissed. “Cold. Calculating. You think you’re better than me because you have money and a father who used to be important.”

Used to be important.

I couldn’t help myself. I leaned toward the phone and said, calmly, “I’m still important to the people you’re trying to rob.”

Vanessa’s breath hitched.

Then she hung up.

Edward looked at Kevin and said, “That call alone is worth its weight in gold. She just demonstrated consciousness of guilt. She knew to ask about recording because she knows she’s exposed.”

When Judge Sanchez dismissed Vanessa’s suit, I watched Kevin’s face. Relief, yes. But also grief. He wasn’t grieving Vanessa. He was grieving the version of his life he’d imagined—the wedding, the future, the illusion.

After the arrest warrants were served, Kevin didn’t cheer. He didn’t smile. He just stood still, like a man watching a building collapse after he’d finally admitted it was unsafe.

That’s something people don’t understand about justice. It doesn’t always feel like victory. Sometimes it feels like cleanup.