I didn’t wait for him to sit down. I didn’t want him comfortable.
I picked up the first red folder and slid it smoothly across the long table. It stopped precisely at the edge of the table, right in front of Vance’s stomach.
“That is the official Emergency Room medical report,” I stated, my voice ringing with absolute, chilling authority in the quiet room. “It details the severe dehydration, the elevated core temperature, and the extensive, linear physical bruising on my daughter’s ribs and arms. The attending physician and the forensic specialist have both signed affidavits confirming the bruises are entirely consistent with the violent grip of an adult male hand.”
“She tripped!” Vance spat, pointing a shaking finger at me, his face flushing dark red. The bully was backed into a corner, defaulting to his only defense: aggression. “She’s clumsy! She’s a liar, just like you were in high school! You’re making this up because you’re still obsessed with me!”
The Police Chief raised an eyebrow, looking at Vance with unvarnished disgust.
I didn’t blink. I didn’t react to his insult. I picked up the second red folder and slid it across the table. It landed on top of the first.
“These,” I continued, my voice dropping to a deadly, precise whisper, “are the three sealed HR complaints from your tenure at Westview High School. They detail a documented, protected pattern of physical intimidation, aggressive contact, and verbal abuse against minor female students. They also contain the emails from the union representative who helped you bury them. We subpoenaed those servers at 2:00 AM this morning.”
Vance’s face drained of all color. The red flush vanished, replaced by a sickly, terrifying pale. He looked at the Superintendent, who was now staring at the floor, realizing his own complicity in hiring Vance was about to be exposed.
“You… you hacked my files?” Vance stammered, his bravado entirely shattered. He took a step backward toward the door, only to find the two uniformed officers had subtly moved to block his exit.
“I am a managing partner at Sterling, Rossi & Vance,” I said coldly. “I don’t hack. I subpoena. I litigate. And I destroy.”
I picked up the third and final folder. It was the thickest of the three. I didn’t slide this one to Vance. I slid it directly toward the Police Chief.
“And this, Chief,” I said, maintaining eye contact with Vance as I spoke to the officer, “are the fully authenticated bank records, routing numbers, and wire transfer receipts proving that Jason Vance has funneled exactly $42,500 from the Oakwood Middle School Athletic Booster Club directly into offshore accounts to pay off illegal gambling debts.”
5. The Walk of Shame
Vance stared at the thick folder resting in front of the Police Chief.
His hands, still holding the styrofoam cup of coffee, began to tremble violently. The tremors traveled up his arms until his entire body was shaking. The styrofoam cup slipped from his numb, powerless fingers. It hit the linoleum floor, bursting open and splattering hot, brown liquid across his cheap shoes.
He didn’t even notice.
He looked at me. The arrogant, untouchable monster who had haunted my nightmares for fifteen years was gone. The terrified teenager he thought he had cornered in this classroom two days ago had completely vanished, replaced by an apex predator who had just meticulously locked every door of his cage and thrown the key into the ocean.
“You… you can’t do this,” Vance whispered. His voice was small, cracked, and pathetic. He sounded exactly like the scared, helpless kids he used to torment in the hallways. “I’ll lose my job. I’ll lose my pension.”
“I already did,” I replied, my voice devoid of any pity. “And you aren’t just losing your job, Jason. You are losing your freedom.”
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