For years, I was his broken trophy, a testament to his power. He had the career I funded, the woman he chose, and complete control over my life.
But on the night his mistress held me at knifepoint on a skyscraper rooftop, she didn't kill me.
She turned and plunged the knife into Armand's chest instead.
And as his legal wife, I inherited everything.
Chapter 1
Ellie POV:
The clinking of silverware echoed in the upscale restaurant, a familiar symphony I now navigated with practiced ease. My job as an event planner meant I was always in the thick of it, orchestrating elegance from chaos. Tonight, the annual charity gala was a success. So much so that I barely registered the familiar profile at a corner table. Not until my assistant pointed him out.
"Isn't that Armand Hill, the famous lawyer?" she whispered, her eyes wide with admiration. "And who's that beautiful woman with him?"
I followed her gaze. Armand. And Cassandra. Seven years. It had been seven years since I married him, and four since I last truly looked at him. He was laughing, a rich, confident sound that tasted like ash in my memory. Cassandra, leaning into him, looked fragile and adored. A perfect picture of a power couple.
I just nodded. "He is."
My voice was flat, devoid of any discernible emotion. I turned back to the dessert station, instructing the chef on the placement of the miniature tarts. There was no pain, no shock. Just a quiet, dull acknowledgment of a past that had once consumed me.
Later, as the last guests trickled out and I oversaw the final cleanup, I felt a familiar presence behind me. I didn't need to turn. The air shifted, growing heavier, colder.
"Ellie."
His voice. It was deeper now, more resonant with authority, but still the same undertone of calculated charm. I kept my back to him, counting the remaining champagne flutes.
"Armand," I replied, my voice as neutral as I could make it.
"Going home?" he asked, a question that felt more like a statement.
I finally turned, meeting his eyes. They were as intense as ever, but something flickered there I couldn't quite decipher. Curiosity? Regret? I didn't care to analyze.
"Eventually," I said, then gestured to the half-dismantled banquet hall. "Still have work."
He stepped closer. "I'll wait."
My jaw tightened imperceptibly. "You don't have to."
"I want to," he insisted, his gaze unwavering.
I finished my duties with a quiet efficiency that felt almost performative under his watchful eye. Every movement was precise, every instruction clear. When the last vendor truck pulled away, leaving the grand ballroom empty and echoing, I walked past him without a word towards the exit.
He followed.
Outside, the New York night was cool and damp. A sleek black car idled at the curb. He opened the passenger door for me. I paused, then walked around to the back. Muscle memory, a habit from years ago when my presence was a prop, not a partner. I slid into the backseat.
The silence in the car was thick, punctuated only by the hum of the engine and the soft drumming of rain starting to fall on the roof. He started the car, but only drove a few blocks before pulling over to the side.
"That dinner," he began, his eyes fixed on the rearview mirror, meeting mine. "It was a client meeting. A potential merger deal. Cassandra was just... there for support."
I stared back at him, my expression blank. His words meant nothing to me. They were just sounds in the confined space of the car.
"It doesn't matter, Armand," I said, my voice flat.
He flinched, a subtle tightening around his eyes. He probably expected a reaction, a flicker of pain, a hint of jealousy. There was nothing left to give him.
My gaze drifted to the passenger seat in front of me. A delicate silk scarf, the color of a bruised plum, lay draped over the headrest. It smelled faintly of expensive perfume and something else... a sweetness that wasn't mine. Old wounds, barely a sting now, but a reminder.
He noticed my focus on the scarf. His eyes darted to it, then back to me through the mirror, a question in their depths. He seemed confused by my lack of reaction. My stillness.
"How are your parents?" he asked, abruptly changing the subject. "I was thinking of visiting them this weekend."
A sudden, cold dread coiled in my stomach. My parents. My brother. My sanctuary.
"They're fine," I said, my voice sharper than before. "But they' ve been a little under the weather lately. Best not to disturb them."
He caught the unspoken command in my tone. His face fell, a shadow passing over his features. He sighed, a deep, weary sound that echoed the damp night outside. Then, he put the car back in gear.
The rain intensified, streaking down the windows, mirroring the turbulent emotions I refused to acknowledge. Once, his presence would have shattered me. Now, it was just an annoyance. A distant echo of a storm long passed.
We drove in silence for what felt like an eternity. The familiar city lights blurred into streaks of color. My neighborhood, then my street. His car pulled up to the curb. My hand was already on the door handle when I realized where we were.
My old apartment building. The one he and I had shared.
My hand froze. I looked at him, a silent question in my eyes. He avoided my gaze, his jaw tight.
"I... I just wanted to see if everything was okay," he mumbled, a rare tremor in his voice. "It's been a while."
I said nothing, my mind racing. Why here? What did he want? A part of me, the old, naive Ellie, wanted to believe this was a gesture of reconciliation. But the new Ellie, forged in fire, knew better.
He led the way to the door of our old unit. He pressed his thumb against the biometric scanner, a ghost of a smile playing on his lips, as if expecting it to magically open. It didn't. The small light on the scanner remained stubbornly red. His smile faltered.
He tried again, and again, with increasing frustration. The door remained shut.
"Must be a power cut," he muttered, fumbling for his phone. He typed something, then pressed it back to the scanner. This time, the lock clicked with a grating sound.
The door swung inward, revealing a cavernous darkness. The air that rushed out was heavy, thick with the scent of mold and rust. He stepped inside, reaching for the light switch. His hand met with a layer of dust so thick it left a gray imprint on his fingers.
"No power," he said, realization dawning on him. "Must be an unpaid bill."
He turned to me, his eyes wide with a sudden, dawning horror. "Ellie? You... you haven't been living here?"
I simply nodded, pulling out my own phone. A few taps, a quick transfer. The overhead lights flickered, then burst to life.
The sight that greeted us stole the air from my lungs. The apartment was a tomb, a time capsule of my darkest days. Torn wedding photos lay scattered across the floor, their smiling faces grotesque in their ruin. The sofa, once a place of comfort, was stained with dark, murky patches. The bed, too, bore the marks of neglect, a silent testament to the despair that had once filled these rooms.
My breath hitched. The jagged scar on my wrist throbbed with a phantom ache. This was where I had laid, bleeding, after I lost everything. After I lost our baby. After I tried to end it all. This was the place where hope died, where I almost died with it.
I looked at Armand, waiting for his reaction. His face was a mask of shock, his eyes darting from the shredded photos to the stained furniture. He looked sick. Good.
"I think you should call the building manager," I said, my voice cold and steady. "They can arrange for a cleanup."
I started to walk away, needing to escape the suffocating memories of this place, this past. But his hand shot out, grabbing my arm. His fingers clamped around my wrist, right over my deepest scar.
I recoiled as if struck by lightning, yanking my arm free. The sudden movement sent a jolt of pain up my arm, but it was nothing compared to the electric shock of his touch, the raw, visceral revulsion that surged through me.
"Don't," I hissed, stepping back, putting as much distance between us as possible. My heart hammered against my ribs, an urgent drumbeat of fear and anger.
He looked stunned, his hand still suspended in the air. "Ellie, wait. Let me take you home."
"No," I said, my voice sharp, final. "I'll call a cab."
I fumbled for my phone, my fingers trembling slightly. A few quick taps, and a car was dispatched. I didn't wait for his reply, didn't look back. I just fled. Down the stairs, not daring to use the elevator. I burst out into the rain-soaked night, gasping for breath, as my ride pulled up to the curb.
The taxi whisked me away, leaving the ghost of my past behind. When I finally reached my actual home, the lights were off. My parents and Barton, my elder brother, were asleep. I crept into my room, relief washing over me.
But the kitchen light flickered on. My mother, her hair still disheveled from sleep, stood there, her eyes worried.
"Ellie, you're back," she said, her voice soft with relief. "I was waiting up for you."
"I'm fine, Mom," I said, trying to sound normal, though my heart still pounded.
She didn't believe me, her knowing gaze raking over my face. She simply walked to the stove, a small pot on the burner. "Go take a shower. I'll warm up some soup for you."
Her simple act of care, the warm, comforting scent of homemade soup, was a balm to my raw nerves. Under the hot spray of the shower, I scrubbed away the lingering scent of that old apartment, that old life. But the scars on my wrists, etched deep into my skin, still pulsed with a dull ache. They were a permanent reminder of the price I had paid.
I stepped out, wrapping a towel around myself. The warmth of the apartment, the quiet hum of the refrigerator, the distant rumble of a car outside. This was my safe place. My haven.
Then, a sharp, insistent knock echoed through the house. My blood ran cold.
The front door.
My parents and Barton stirred, their footsteps heavy as they emerged from their rooms, drawn by the unexpected noise. My mother, eyes wide with alarm, clung to my father's arm. Barton, ever protective, moved instinctively in front of me.
My father slowly opened the door.
And there he stood. Armand. Impeccable as always, framed by the rain-slicked night. His suit was still perfect, his expression unreadable, a cool, calculating mask. He looked perfectly at ease, as if he belonged there. He looked like a conqueror in my sanctuary.
"Barton," he said, his voice calm, almost cordial. "It's been a while."
My brother's face, usually so open and kind, contorted into a mask of pure, unadulterated hatred.