Today was their third wedding anniversary. For three years, Avery had played the part of the perfect, "silent" wife. To the world, she was the tragic daughter of a fallen house who had lost her voice to trauma-a mute, submissive shadow who lived only to serve the brilliant Lucca Valentine.
The front door groaned open. Heavy, rhythmic footsteps echoed in the hallway-the sound of a man who owned the world but had no room in his heart for the woman waiting in it.
Lucca entered, his charcoal suit jacket draped over his arm. He didn't look at the candles. He didn't look at the $2,000 bottle of vintage Bordeaux she'd managed to source. He looked at Avery as if she were a piece of furniture he'd forgotten to move.
"You're still up," he said, his voice a low, gravelly baritone that used to make her heart flutter. Now, it just felt like a chill.
Avery nodded, offering a gentle, practiced smile. She stepped forward to take his jacket, her hands moving with the grace of a trained servant.
"Don't bother," Lucca snapped, pulling away. He reached into his briefcase and tossed a thick manila envelope onto the dining table, right on top of the lace centerpiece she had spent hours hand-stitching. "Save your energy. You'll need it for packing."
Avery's breath hitched. She didn't need to open the envelope to know what it was. The word DIVORCE was practically vibrating through the paper.
"Melanie is back from London," Lucca said, his tone softening for the first time-but not for Avery. The mention of Melanie Thorne, his "soulmate" and Avery's former best friend, brought a light to his eyes that Avery hadn't seen in years. "And she's pregnant. I won't have my heir born out of wedlock."
Avery stood frozen. The irony was a bitter pill; she had spent three years hiding her true identity, protecting Lucca's company from the shadows using her family's secret connections, only to be discarded for a woman who had spent those same years spending Lucca's money in Europe.
Lucca walked to the sideboard and poured himself a glass of the wine she had decanted. He took a sip, then grimaced. "Too acidic. Just like this marriage."
He turned back to her, his gaze narrowing. "I've been generous. You get the suburban condo and a monthly stipend of ten thousand dollars. For a girl from the streets who can't even speak, it's a winning lottery ticket. Sign the papers, Avery. Let's not make this more pathetic than it already is."
Avery looked down at the divorce decree. She thought of the three years she had spent scrubbing floors because his mother refused to let "the mute girl" hire staff. She thought of the nights she spent ghost-writing his business proposals to ensure the Valentine Group didn't go bankrupt during the 2024 crash.
Most of all, she thought of her father's dying wish: "Hide your light until the Wood's enemies are gone, Avery. Be the ghost in the machine."
Tonight, the enemies were gone. And tonight, the ghost was tired of being haunted.
Lucca leaned over the table, tapping a gold fountain pen against the signature line. "Well? Sign it. Or do I need to call a translator to explain it in sign language?"
Avery reached out. Her fingers, slender and pale, brushed against the cold paper. She picked up the pen. Lucca smirked, a look of bored triumph on his face. He expected her to cry. He expected her to plead with her eyes.
Instead, Avery gripped the edge of the table. With a sudden, violent jerk, she flipped the entire spread.
CRASH.
The crystal shattered. The vintage wine splattered across Lucca's expensive Italian leather shoes like a bloodbath. The wagyu beef slid onto the floor.
Lucca jumped back, his face contorting in rage. "What the hell is wrong with you? You stupid, useless-"
"The wine isn't acidic, Lucca," a voice interrupted.
The air in the room seemed to vanish. Lucca froze, his mouth hanging open. The voice was rich, melodic, and hummed with a power that shook the very foundations of the room. It was the voice of a woman who commanded empires.
Avery stood tall, her shoulders back, the "meek" slump of her posture vanishing. She looked at him with eyes that weren't filled with tears, but with a terrifying, golden clarity.
"It's a 1945 Chateau Mouton Rothschild," Avery said, her voice steady and chillingly calm. "It requires a refined palate to appreciate. Something you've clearly lost while spending your time in Melanie's shallow company."
Lucca stepped back, his heart hammering against his ribs. "You... you can talk? You've been faking it for three years?"
"I wasn't faking silence, Lucca," Avery said, stepping over the broken glass, her gaze pinning him to the spot. "I was observing. And I've observed enough to know that you are a very small man in a very large suit."
She picked up the divorce papers from the floor, which were remarkably unsplattered. She pulled a pen from her own pocket-a custom-made platinum Wood's Signature series-and scrawled her name in a bold, aggressive script.
She slapped the papers against his chest.
"I'm signing these not because you want me to leave," she whispered into his ear, her breath warm but her words like ice. "I'm signing them because I'm bored of playing house with a failure. Keep your condo, Lucca. I'll be taking the penthouse at the Woods Plaza."
"The Woods Plaza?" Lucca scoffed, trying to regain his footing despite his trembling hands. "That's the headquarters of the Woods Conglomerate. You can't even get past the lobby."
Avery smiled-a predatory, beautiful tilt of the lips.
"I don't need to get past the lobby, Lucca. I own the building."
She turned on her heel, leaving him standing in the wreckage of their anniversary dinner. As she reached the door, she paused.
"Oh, and Lucca? Tell Melanie I'm sending her a gift. I hear she likes diamonds. It's a shame she'll be wearing lab-grown ones once I've finished crashing your stock price tomorrow morning."
Avery stepped out into the night, where a line of black sedans was already pulling into the driveway, their headlights cutting through the dark like the eyes of a returning queen.