Elisa stared at the heavy diamond ring on her left hand.
The stone caught the afternoon light filtering through the floor-to-ceiling windows of the Whitney estate master bedroom. She gripped the platinum band with her right thumb and index finger. She pulled.
The metal resisted, scraping against her skin. She yanked it harder. The ring slid off, leaving a harsh, angry red line around her finger.
She didn't look at it again. For a single, fleeting second, the image of the naive girl who had joyfully accepted this ring three years ago flashed across her mind. A girl who had stupidly believed in a fairy tale. Then, the warmth vanished from her eyes, freezing over completely. She closed that pathetic era of her life for good. She tossed the multi-million-dollar piece of jewelry into the metal trash can next to her vanity. It hit the bottom with a hollow clink.
Elisa turned her back to the window and walked toward the mahogany wet bar in the corner of the room. She reached for a bottle of Napa Valley red wine. Her hands did not shake. Her breathing was completely even.
She poured the dark red liquid into two crystal glasses.
Reaching into the pocket of her slacks, she pulled out a small, unlabeled white plastic vial. She popped the cap off with her thumb. She tipped the vial over one of the glasses, letting a heavy dose of white powder fall into the wine.
She picked up the glass and swirled it gently. The powder dissolved instantly, vanishing into the deep red liquid without a trace.
Outside, the low, aggressive growl of tires crushing the gravel driveway broke the silence.
Elisa walked back to the window. Through the sheer curtains, she saw the black Maybach come to a halt. The back door opened. Conrad stepped out.
Even from this distance, the tension in his shoulders was obvious. His jaw was locked tight. He radiated a cold, impatient energy.
His assistant, David Shaw, hurried out of the passenger side, clutching a thick manila envelope against his chest.
A moment later, the heavy thud of the front doors opening echoed up to the second floor.
Solid, rhythmic footsteps hit the oak stairs. They grew louder, moving down the hallway, stopping right outside the master bedroom.
The door was shoved open. It hit the wall hard.
Conrad walked in. He didn't knock. He stood in the center of the room, his tall frame dominating the space, looking down at her with absolute disdain.
David stepped in behind him, pulling a stack of documents from the envelope. The divorce agreement and the Non-Disclosure Agreement.
Conrad snatched the papers from David and threw them onto the glass coffee table. They landed with a sharp slap.
"Sign them," Conrad ordered. His voice was flat, devoid of any warmth. "And don't waste your breath asking for alimony. You get nothing."
He expected her to cry. He expected her to beg, to cling to his arm like she had for the past three years. A dark, unacknowledged part of him actually craved that predictable drama. It was a script he knew, a power dynamic where he held absolute control, feeding his ego with her desperate devotion. Her silence was a deviation he hadn't prepared for.
Elisa did none of that. She walked calmly to the coffee table.
She picked up the black fountain pen resting next to the papers. She didn't read a single line of the harsh, humiliating clauses.
She pressed the nib to the paper and signed her name on both documents in quick, fluid strokes.
Conrad's eyes narrowed. A flicker of genuine shock crossed his face. His fingers twitched toward his cuffs, a nervous habit he only displayed when a negotiation went off script.
Elisa put the pen down. She picked up the glass of laced wine and held it out to him.
The corner of her mouth lifted into a mocking smile. "One last drink. To celebrate our successful separation."
Conrad let out a harsh, breathy laugh. He wanted this farce over with. He reached out and snatched the glass from her hand.
He tilted his head back and swallowed the wine in one continuous gulp. He slammed the empty glass back onto the table.
Seven seconds passed.
Conrad's vision blurred. The edges of the room began to spin violently. He took a step back, his heavy dress shoes stumbling over the Persian rug.
"What..." His voice slurred.
He reached out to grab the edge of the sofa, but his muscles turned to water. The potent sedative hit his nervous system like a freight train.
His knees buckled. Conrad's massive frame crashed heavily onto the floor, his eyes rolling back as total darkness swallowed him.