Julian Astor didn't flinch. He was in the center of the grand ballroom, a king in his court, the host of this private salon, a glass of amber whiskey in one hand. He had been laughing with Robert Reynolds, the CEO of some tech firm he was planning to acquire. When his eyes met Seraphina's, the laughter died on his lips, replaced by a familiar, chilling stillness.
Whispers erupted around them. "Is that her?" "What is she wearing?" "She has some nerve showing up like this."
Roxanne Knight, a woman whose diamonds were as sharp as her tongue, had tried to block her path moments earlier. "Well, look what the cat dragged in," she'd sneered, her voice loud enough for everyone to hear. "Dressed for a funeral, darling? Whose is it?"
Seraphina had walked right past her, her focus singular. Now, that focus was wavering under Julian's gaze. It was a look that stripped her bare, cataloged her worth, and found her wanting.
He didn't take the envelope. He simply looked at it, then back at her face, a slow, deliberate motion. A cruel smirk played on his lips. "A divorce? Seraphina, who do you think you are?"
The air crackled. The string quartet faltered, their melody dissolving into a nervous scrape of bows. Robert Reynolds cleared his throat, a pathetic attempt to diffuse the tension. "Julian, perhaps this is a joke..."
"She's just trying to embarrass you!" Roxanne added, rushing to Julian's side like a loyal hound. "The ungrateful bitch."
Julian raised a hand, not to Seraphina, but to his head butler, who stood rigidly by the massive oak doors. His voice was low, yet it carried across the cavernous room with absolute authority. "See our guests out."
There was a collective gasp, followed by a frantic scramble. No one wanted to be caught in the crossfire. Within minutes, the ballroom, once teeming with New York's elite, was empty. The sound of their hurried departures faded, leaving only the oppressive silence and the cold, indifferent light of the crystal chandeliers.
It was in this very room, five years ago, that she had married him. She remembered the hope that had felt so real it was a physical ache in her chest. Now, all that remained was a different kind of ache.
Julian moved toward her, each step deliberate and menacing. He was a predator, and she was trapped. She instinctively took a step back, her heel catching on the polished marble.
"You are not leaving me," he said, his voice a low growl that vibrated through the floor. "Not now. Not ever."
He stopped just inches from her, the scent of his expensive cologne and the whiskey on his breath enveloping her, suffocating her. "You don't get to decide when this is over."
"I can't do this anymore," she whispered, her resolve crumbling.
"You can't?" He laughed, a short, ugly sound. "You will stay here, in this house, as my wife, until you have paid for what you did."
He reached out, his fingers wrapping around her wrist like a steel cuff. The envelope fell from her numb fingers, scattering its contents across the floor. The bold heading stared up at them: DIVORCE AGREEMENT.
He yanked her closer, their bodies colliding. His face was a mask of cold fury. He leaned down, his lips brushing against her ear, his words a venomous promise.
"Did you really think," he hissed, "that you had the right to talk about an 'ending' before you've atoned for her murder?"
Isabelle. Her sister's name was the key to her prison.
"It was an accident," she choked out, the same futile words she had repeated for years.
His grip tightened, pain shooting up her arm. "No," he breathed, his eyes burning with a hatred that consumed everything. "It was murder. And the sentence has just begun."