I was face down on the shattered glass of our dining room when my husband pressed his Italian shoe into my spine. The crystal cut my cheek, my blouse hung open at the shoulder, and behind me, Victor Hale laughed like he had finally broken something expensive enough to admire.
“Cry all you want, punching bag,” he hissed, grinding his heel lower. “Your useless father can’t pay to save you.”
I did not cry.
That irritated him more than screaming ever had.
Around us, the dining room looked like the end of a war—wine bleeding across white marble, broken plates glittering beneath the chandelier, my blood marking the floor in small red commas. Victor’s mother stood near the fireplace, pearl necklace glowing against her black dress.
“Honestly, Elena,” she said, bored. “A woman in your position should learn when to kneel.
”
His sister, Camille, filmed from the doorway.
“For insurance,” she said with a smile. “In case you accuse us again.”
Victor leaned closer. His breath smelled like whiskey and victory. “Tonight, I sign the merger papers. Tomorrow, I own half the city. And you? You’ll explain to everyone that you fell.”
I turned my head just enough to look at him.
He hated my calm.
For three years, Victor had believed he married downward.
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