I spent the next three hours in a private suite Celeste had prepared. There were no mirrors in prison, only polished metal plates that distorted your face into a monster. Now, as I stood before a floor-to-ceiling glass mirror, I saw the woman Marcus tried to kill.
The “state-issued” rags were replaced by a gown of midnight-blue silk, so dark it looked like a bruise. It clung to my frame, revealing the sharpness of my collarbones—the physical cost of two years of gray slop and bitterness. A diamond choker, cold and heavy, sat against my throat like a collar I chose for myself.
“He thinks you’re a broken thing, Elena,” Celeste said, adjusting the strap of my dress. “He thinks you’ll crawl to a motel and disappear.”
“Marcus always underestimated my capacity for silence,” I replied. “He thought my silence in court was submission. He didn’t realize I was just taking notes.”
The Grand Entrance: The Sapphire Gala
The Grand Ballroom was a sea of false smiles and champagne. I walked through the arched entrance, my heels clicking against the marble with the rhythm of a firing squad.
The room didn’t go silent immediately. It happened in ripples. First, the investors who recognized the “disgraced wife.” Then, the socialites who had whispered about my “instability.” Finally, the ripple reached the center of the room, where Marcus stood.
He looked radiant. He was laughing, one hand possessively around Vivian’s waist. Vivian was draped in white—the color of innocence she had used to bury me. She looked radiant, too. No one would ever guess she had faked a miscarriage using a staged fall and a sympathetic, bribed doctor.
Then, Marcus turned.
His glass slowed mid-air. The color drained from his face, turning his “cedar-scented confidence” into a pale, sickly mask.
“Elena?” he gasped, the name catching in his throat like a bone.
I didn’t stop until I was standing three inches from him. I could smell his fear—a sharp, metallic scent that cut through his cologne.
“You look like you’ve seen a ghost, Marcus,” I said, my voice smooth and terrifyingly calm. “But I assure you, the cage didn’t hold.”
Vivian stepped back, her hand fluttering to her throat. “You… you’re supposed to be… you shouldn’t be here. Guards! This is a private event!”
“I’m a majority shareholder, Vivian,” I said, turning my gaze to her. “Did Marcus forget to tell you? The shares he tried to force me to sign over? I signed them. Just not to him.”
Marcus’s eyes darted to the CEO of Sterling Group, who was watching the scene with growing discomfort. “Elena, don’t do this. We can talk in private. I’ll give you a settlement, enough to start over—”
“A settlement?” I laughed. It was a dry, hollow sound. “You sent me to a hellhole for 730 days for a crime that never happened. You watched as I was dragged away in chains so you could play house with your mistress. You don’t have enough money in your bloodline to pay for a single second of that time.”
The Paper Trail
I pulled a small, sleek remote from my clutch and pointed it at the massive digital display behind the podium—the one currently showing the “Marcus & Sterling” logo.
“Wait!” Marcus lunged for me, but Celeste’s security team blocked him.
The screen flickered. It didn’t show the merger details. Instead, it showed a video. High-definition, timestamped two years ago. It was a camera feed from the hallway of our old penthouse—a hidden nanny cam Marcus had installed to spy on me, forgetting that I had the master access codes.
The room watched in deafening silence. On the screen, Vivian was standing perfectly fine. She was talking on the phone, laughing. “The pills worked, Marcus. There’s enough blood on the floor to make it look real. She’ll be blamed. Just make sure the doctor handles the report.”