“Document everything.”
“What?”
“Every call. Every text. Every voicemail. Every screenshot.”
At 9:46, the club manager called.
“Ms. Salazar, sorry to bother you, but Mr. Bennett is attempting to authorize charges through your corporate membership.”
“My ex-husband,” I corrected.
There was an uncomfortable pause.
“I understand. There’s something else.”
My stomach tightened.
“What?”
“He signed an authorization form using your company’s name.”
Cold flooded through me.
“And?”
The manager hesitated.
“He also signed your name.”
I sat up straight.
“Save everything.”
“Excuse me?”
“The bill. The security footage. The signatures. Every communication.”
Another pause.
“Understood.”
At 10:15 p.m., Michael sent his final message of the night.
You’re going to regret humiliating me.
Dad read it once.
Then looked at me.
“No, sweetheart.”
His voice was calm.
“The one who’s going to regret tonight is him.”
And I still had no idea that the rejected credit card charge was only the beginning of a much uglier betrayal.
The next morning, Michael showed up at my company headquarters in downtown Chicago wearing sunglasses despite the gray, rainy sky.
Our receptionist, Lupita, called my office.
“Mariana… he’s here.”
I looked out the floor-to-ceiling windows from the thirty-second floor.
“Don’t let him upstairs.”
“He’s yelling.”
Of course he was.
For years Michael treated every boundary like an unlocked door.
When we met, he was a real estate consultant.
Charming.
Well dressed.
Humble in a way that now felt painfully rehearsed.
At first, he claimed to admire my ambition.
Later I realized he admired my access.
My wealthy clients.
My business network.
My bank accounts.
My corporate memberships.
My cards.
The things that opened doors.
I activated the lobby speaker system.
“Michael, leave the building.”
He looked directly at the security camera.
“Mariana, don’t be ridiculous. We need to talk.”
“We have nothing to discuss.”
“You froze the cards.”
“I protected accounts that belong to me.”
“You destroyed my reputation.”
I laughed.
“You tried spending over three hundred thousand dollars through my company five hours after our divorce.”
The lobby went silent.
Employees stopped walking.
A courier froze mid-step.
Even the security guards looked entertained.
Michael removed his sunglasses.
A bruise darkened his left eye.
I didn’t ask questions.
Private clubs aren’t known for their patience with customers who can’t pay.
“You planned this,” he snapped.
“No,” I replied.
“You planned a night you couldn’t afford.”
At that moment my attorney, Teresa Campbell, arrived carrying a thick folder.
She spread documents across my desk.
“The club cooperated.”
I leaned forward.
“The bill?”
“Detailed itemization.”
She pointed down the list.
Food.
Alcohol.
Private suite.
Entertainment.