They Threw the Wife Out with Nothing – Then Her Name Froze the Entire Courtroom
Chapter 6: Final Justice and the Rotting Shack
The courtroom for the final hearing was different this time. It wasn’t the sterile family court; it was the Superior Court dealing with complex fraud and corporate malfeasance.
And it was packed. Samantha sat at the plaintiff’s table, flanked by Henry Cole and a team of three other lawyers from Kensington and Wright.
She wore navy blue this time—the color of authority. She looked untouchable.
Gregory and Lucille sat on the defense side. They looked haggard. They had been forced to use a public defender, a young, overworked man named Mr. Henderson who looked like he hadn’t slept in a week.
Grimshaw had sued Gregory for unpaid legal fees and leaked damaging, privileged information in the process to save his own skin.
“All rise!” the bailiff called.
Judge Patterson was back, but this time he was accompanied by a forensic auditor who sat near the witness stand with a stack of binders two feet high.
“We are here to finalize the division of assets and address the counterclaims of fraud,” Judge Patterson said. “Mr. Cole, you may proceed.”
Henry Cole stood up. He didn’t need theatrics anymore; he had the math.
“Your Honor,” Henry began. “The forensic audit of Dalton Tech has revealed a systematic looting of company assets over the last seven years. Three million dollars was diverted to shell companies registered to Lucille Dalton.”
The gallery gasped. Lucille shrank into her coat.
“These funds,” Henry continued. “Were used to purchase jewelry, finance vacations, and cover gambling debts in Atlantic City—all labeled in the company ledger as R&D consultation fees.”
Gregory stood up, his voice cracking.
“I didn’t know! She told me she had family money!”
“You signed the checks, Mr. Dalton,” Henry said, holding up a blown-up image of a check. “This is your signature. You authorized every penny.”
“I just signed what she put in front of me,” Gregory stammered.
It was the ultimate admission of incompetence. The tech genius was nothing more than a puppet.
“Furthermore,” Henry said, turning to the judge. “We have established that the core intellectual property of Dalton Tech, the algorithm for the predictive software, was authored entirely by Samantha Kensington Dalton. The patent application filed by Gregory Dalton bears a fraudulent declaration of inventorship.”
“Mr. Henderson,” the judge looked at the public defender. “Do you have a defense?”
Mr. Henderson stood up, adjusted his glasses, and sighed.
“Your Honor, my clients plead incompetence. They argue that they did not understand the complex financial structures—”
“Incompetence is not a defense for fraud,” the judge snapped. “Especially not when you are the CEO of a publicly traded entity.”
The judge turned to Samantha.
“Mrs. Dalton, or should I say, Ms. Kensington? You have the leverage here. You hold the debt note. You own the IP. What is your request?”
The room went silent. This was the moment.
Samantha stood up. She walked to the center of the room.
She looked at Gregory, who was sweating through his cheap suit. She looked at Lucille, who was weeping silently into a tissue.
“I don’t want them to go to jail,” Samantha said softly.
Gregory looked up, hope sparking in his eyes.
“Jail is too easy,” Samantha continued. “And it costs the taxpayers money. I want them to understand what it means to start over. Truly start over.”
She turned to the judge.
“I am calling in the loan from the Artemis Group. Immediate repayment. Since they cannot pay, I am exercising the foreclosure clause. I am taking the company. I am taking the mansion. I am taking the contents of the accounts to satisfy the debt,” Samantha stated.
“Granted,” the judge said firmly.
“However,” Samantha added. “I am not a monster. I will not throw them out in the snow with nothing.”
She reached into her briefcase and pulled out a single envelope. She walked over to the defense table and placed it in front of Gregory.
“What is this?” Gregory whispered.
“It’s a deed,” Samantha said. “To the cabin in upstate New York. The one your father left you before he died. The one you tried to sell last year but couldn’t because it was too run-down.”
It was a shack—a rotting hunting cabin with no electricity and a wood stove.
“It’s in your name, Gregory. It’s the only thing I didn’t touch. It’s paid off. It’s a roof over your head,” Samantha explained.
“You expect us to live in a shack?” Lucille shrieked. “I am a Dalton!”
“No,” Samantha said, cold as ice. “You are a debtor. And as of today, you are homeless. You have the cabin, and you have the clothes on your back.”
“And Gregory?” He looked at her, tears streaming down his face. “Yes, Sam?”
“I’m keeping the dog,” she said.
A ripple of laughter went through the courtroom. It wasn’t a joke; it was the final severing of ties.
The Golden Retriever, Barnaby, whom Gregory had ignored for years, was the only living thing in that house worth saving.
“Order!” the judge called, hiding a smile. “Judgment is entered in favor of the defendant. Dalton Tech is hereby transferred to the control of Samantha Kensington. The remaining assets are seized. Case closed.”
The gavel banged. It sounded like a gunshot.
Security guards moved forward—not to escort Samantha out, but to escort Gregory and Lucille. They had to hand over their watches, their phones (which were company property), and the keys to the mansion right there in the courtroom.
Samantha didn’t watch them leave. She turned to Henry Cole.
“It’s done,” she said.
“Not quite,” Henry smiled. “Mr. Sterling is on line one. He wants to know if the new owner of Dalton Tech is willing to restart merger negotiations. He’s offering twenty percent more than he offered Gregory.”
Samantha smiled. It was a real smile, one that reached her eyes.
“Tell him I’ll meet him. But not at the office,” Samantha said.
“Tell him to meet me at the Bluebird Diner,” she added.
“The diner where you used to work?” Henry raised an eyebrow.
“Yes,” Samantha said, picking up her bag. “I want to remind myself where I came from. And I want to make sure I never forget that the person serving the coffee might just own the place one day.”
She walked out of the courtroom, the heavy doors swinging open for her. Outside, the sun was shining. The snow was melting. The winter was over.
