He Replaced Me With His Mistress At Our 20th Anniversary Gala — Then The Bank Called During The Board Meeting-QuynhTranJP

The speakerphone lit up in the middle of the boardroom table, its screen glowing against the polished walnut like a small square of judgment. Nobody reached for it at first. The HVAC pushed cold air from the ceiling vents. Somewhere beyond the glass wall, an assistant’s heels passed in a quick rhythm and disappeared. Ethan stared at the incoming call as if he could will the name to vanish.

Wells Fargo Fraud Division.

I looked at Patricia.

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She looked at the phone.

Then at the forged signature page in front of her.

“Put it on speaker,” Michael Carter said.

Ethan finally moved. “This is absurd,” he snapped, but there was a new edge in his voice now, thinner and sharper, like the polished surface had cracked underneath. “You’re all reacting to incomplete information.”

No one answered him.

Patricia pressed the button.

A man’s voice came through the speaker, calm, neutral, trained. “This is Daniel Reeves with Wells Fargo’s internal fraud review unit. Am I speaking with a representative present for Ethan Morgan and Ivy Morgan regarding mortgage instrument 44-1187?”

Patricia cleared her throat. “You are speaking with the company’s head of legal, two board members, and the parties involved.”

There was a small pause.

“Then I’ll keep this limited,” he said. “We have identified material inconsistencies between the signature samples submitted on the collateral documents and the verified signature history on file for Mrs. Ivy Morgan.”

Nobody moved.

Nobody even pretended to shuffle papers.

Clare’s hand, still resting near her iPad, slowly curled inward until her knuckles showed white. Ethan leaned back in his chair, but it was the wrong movement. Not relaxed. Not confident. It looked like retreat.

Daniel Reeves continued. “In addition, the timeline of the authorization packet contains transfer prep activity involving two different user credentials and one unverified forwarding route. We are placing the loan under immediate formal review.”

I watched Ethan’s face as those words landed. He had spent years cultivating a look of control. Investors loved it. Reporters described him as measured. Men like Ethan build careers out of appearing untouched.

Now the color was leaving him in strips.

Patricia asked, “Would you classify this as possible fraud?”

The answer came without hesitation.

“Yes.”

Clare inhaled sharply.

Ethan sat forward so abruptly his chair wheels twitched. “That’s enough,” he said. “I want counsel present before this goes any further.”

Michael folded his hands. “You should have thought of counsel before using your wife’s name on a three-million-dollar loan.”

“She’s not my wife in any relevant professional capacity,” Ethan fired back, and the second he said it, he realized too late that the room had shifted against him. Not because of the insult. Because of the panic inside it.

I didn’t answer him.

I reached into my bag and removed one final sheet Rebecca had insisted I carry. A printed access log summary. Time stamps. Device IDs. Internal file pulls. Clare’s credentials. Ethan’s office terminal.

I slid it toward Patricia.

“That’s the second part,” I said. “The document removals tied to the Witmore and Evergate losses.”

Michael took the page before Patricia could. He scanned down the lines, jaw hardening.

“March 11,” he said quietly. “That’s forty-eight hours before Evergate withdrew.”

James Donovan, who had barely spoken all morning, adjusted his glasses again. “You’re telling us internal strategic documents were accessed and exported from an executive machine before two major contracts collapsed?”

“Not telling you,” I said. “Showing you.”

Clare straightened in her seat. “Those logs can be misread. I accessed files because Ethan asked me to prepare briefing materials. That was part of my job.”

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