She had planned everything perfectly. The vintage Bordeaux breathing on the sideboard, the 999 pale pink roses arranged in crystal vases throughout the living room, the soft glow of the candles she intended to light. Three years ago today, she had signed her name on a marriage certificate that felt like a lottery ticket she didn't deserve. Tonight, she would remind him why he had chosen her.
Eleonora dried her hands thoroughly and walked down the hallway lined with Persian rugs. The study door stood at the end, polished mahogany with a brass handle that had always been forbidden territory. Jace's sanctuary. His private domain where billion-dollar deals were sealed and secrets kept.
She pushed it open.
The room smelled of Cuban cigars and cedarwood, cold and expensive. Her eyes moved past the leather-bound volumes to the massive desk where his multi-screen workstation sat dormant, screens dark. She wasn't looking for a file or a secret, but for something small and symbolic. The silver cigar cutter he kept in the right-hand drawer, the one that had belonged to his father. She wanted to use its flame to light their anniversary candles, a private ritual, a bridge to a time when he spoke of family and legacy.
Her fingers found the drawer pull. No cigar cutter inside. But her elbow brushed the mouse as she straightened, and the screens blazed to life.
Eleonora froze.
The interface displayed Jace's private encrypted cloud server, the one he accessed through triple-authentication protocols. The screensaver hadn't engaged. A folder sat in the corner of the desktop, labeled in stark black text: Project Retribution. A red warning icon pulsed beside it.
She should have clicked away. Should have shut down the machine and walked back to her kitchen, to her roses, to her pathetic hope.
Instead, she moved the mouse.
The password prompt demanded ten digits. She typed their wedding anniversary. Error. She bit her lip, entered Jace's birthday. Error again. Her fingers hovered, trembling, as a name she had spent three years trying to forget surfaced in her mind like poison.
Isabella Ramos. October 14, 1995.
10141995.
The green unlock chime sang through the speakers.
The folder bloomed across the screen, and Eleonora's breath stopped. Hundreds of photographs tiled the display, organized by year. Isabella at Coachella, 2019. Isabella at the Met Gala after-party, 2020. Isabella on a yacht in Monaco, candid shots, professional shots, paparazzi shots, all catalogued with obsessive precision.
Eleonora's hand moved independently of her brain, scrolling deeper.
A document titled Preferences opened to reveal meticulous notes. Isabella favored pale pink roses, specifically the David Austin cultivar "Keira." The exact variety currently suffocating the living room with their cloying sweetness.
Her stomach lurched.
She clicked Replica_Gifts. A spreadsheet unfolded, three years of data. Every anniversary present Jace had given her- the pearl earrings, the limited-edition Birkin, the Cartier bracelet- each item matched with an identical or superior version previously purchased for Isabella Ramos. Eleonora had worn another woman's hand-me-downs like a fool.
The final PDF file waited. Prenup_Strategy.
Her finger clicked.
Email chains between Jace and his attorneys filled the screen, dated three weeks before their wedding. She read the subject lines. She read the body text. She read Jace's own annotations in the margins, crisp and brutal.
"Marriage serves dual purpose: provoke Ramos family reaction and establish public commitment that forces Isabella's hand. Selected candidate possesses minimal education, no social connections, zero independent resources. Ideal for controlled environment. Prenup terms must be maximally punitive to ensure complete dependency. The more humiliating her position, the more effective the message to Ramos."
Eleonora's lungs forgot how to work. She gripped the executive chair's armrests, her knuckles whitening, as the room tilted. The words blurred and refocused, each sentence a physical blow. Controlled environment. Complete dependency. Humiliating position.
The electronic lock on the front door chimed.
Her head snapped toward the sound. Footsteps in the foyer, heavier than usual, faster. She slammed the mouse toward the logout button, her hands shaking so violently she missed twice. The screens went dark as the study door swung open.
Jace Franco filled the doorway, six-foot-three in bespoke charcoal suiting, his dark hair slightly disheveled from the autumn wind. His eyes- gray-green and always calculating- swept the room and locked onto her face.
"What are you doing in here?"
Eleonora's hip collided with the desk corner as she stood, the impact sending fire through her pelvis. She bit the inside of her cheek until she tasted copper, forcing her expression blank.
"I was looking for a cloth. The wine spilled in the kitchen."
His gaze dropped to the darkened screens, then returned to her. Two seconds of silence stretched into eternity.
"There's a linen closet beside the pantry."
"I forgot." She managed a smile, her cheek muscles screaming. "Dinner's almost ready. The short ribs-"
"Change of plans." He stepped into the room, forcing her to retreat toward the window. "I'm going out. Don't wait up."
"Out? But it's our-"
"I know what day it is." His voice carried no inflection, no warmth, no memory of the man who had once looked at her like she mattered. If he ever had. "The roses were delivered this morning. Consider them acknowledged."
He moved past her to the desk, his shoulder brushing hers with deliberate indifference. His hand rested on the mouse, and Eleonora's heart seized- but the screens remained dark, the session timed out.
"Leave the study as you found it." He didn't turn around. "This room is not yours. Nothing here is yours. That was the agreement from the beginning."
Eleonora walked to the door on legs that felt wooden, distant, belonging to someone else. In the hallway, she pressed her palm against the wall to stay upright. The pain in her hip throbbed in time with her pulse, grounding her in a body she suddenly didn't recognize.
The kitchen waited, pristine and ridiculous, 999 pale pink roses watching her with mocking silence.