She reached for the drawer, her fingers finding the familiar cardboard box. It was routine. A sterile, loveless routine that defined the last two years of her life. She pulled out a foil wrapper, ready to toss it into the trash, when her thumb caught on something rough.
She frowned, bringing the packet closer to her face. Under the bright vanity lights, the silver foil looked wrong. Right in the center, almost invisible unless you were looking for it, was a tiny, perfect puncture.
Her breath hitched. She grabbed another one. And another. Her hands moved faster, pulling out the entire contents of the box. Every single wrapper had the same microscopic hole.
A cold sweat broke out across the back of her neck. This wasn't an accident. You don't accidentally poke holes in an entire box of condoms. Someone had done this. Someone wanted her pregnant.
Debora. The name flashed in her mind like a neon sign. Her mother-in-law had been dropping hints for months, complaining about the lack of an heir, glaring at Helena's flat stomach across the dinner table like it was a personal insult.
The bathroom door swung open.
Dante stood in the doorway, his chest heaving slightly from his workout, a towel draped around his neck. His dark hair was damp, and the smell of sweat and expensive body wash hit her like a wall.
His eyes dropped to her hands, to the torn-apart box and the scattered foil wrappers. His expression, which had been blank, instantly hardened into something cold and sharp.
"What is this?" he asked, his voice dangerously low.
Helena's throat went dry. "I found them like this, Dante. Look at them. Someone put holes-"
He crossed the distance between them in two strides and snatched the box from her hands. He examined one of the wrappers, his jaw clenching so tight she could see the muscle tick.
He let out a short, bitter laugh. It was a sound completely devoid of humor. "Two years, Helena. Two years, and you're still pulling this trash?"
The words slapped her. "What? No, I didn't do this! Why would I-"
"To trap me," he said, cutting her off. He threw the box onto the floor, the remaining wrappers scattering across the white marble tiles. "You think I'm stupid? You think I don't know exactly what kind of person you are?"
"I'm not trying to trap you!" Her voice shook, but not from fear. From sheer frustration. "I just got home! I was about to-"
His phone rang.
The sharp, melodic chime of Debussy's "Clair de Lune" cut through the heavy silence in the bathroom. It was the ringtone he only used for one person.
Dante's entire demeanor shifted. The ice in his eyes melted instantly, replaced by a softness that made Helena's stomach plummet. He pulled the phone from his pocket, his thumb swiping to answer.
"Kins?" His voice was different. Gentle. Warm. A tone he had never once used with Helena. "You're here? Already? Don't worry, I'm leaving right now."
Helena felt her legs go numb. Kinsley Spencer. The woman who owned the other half of his heart was back in New York.
Dante ended the call and shoved the phone back in his pocket. He didn't look at Helena. He walked past her into the bedroom, stripping off his workout shirt as he went.
"Where are you going?" Helena asked, though she already knew the answer.
"Kinsley just had surgery on her leg," he said, pulling a fresh shirt from the closet. "She needs me."
"She needs you," Helena repeated, the words tasting like ash in her mouth. "And what about me? What about this?" She pointed to the ruined condoms on the floor.
Dante paused by the bedroom door, pulling on his jacket. He reached into his wallet, pulled out a sleek black credit card, and tossed it onto the glass top of the nightstand. It landed with a hard slap.
"Buy something nice," he said, his eyes meeting hers with absolute disdain. "And stop playing games. It's unbecoming."
He turned the handle.
The anger that had been building in her chest, the years of being ignored, belittled, and treated like a parasite, suddenly ignited into something white-hot and undeniable.
"We're getting a divorce, Dante."
He froze. His hand still rested on the doorknob. For a split second, the silence in the room was deafening.
Then he turned his head, just enough to look at her over his shoulder. The surprise on his face flickered for a moment before it was swallowed by a sneer.
"A divorce?" he scoffed. "Is that the new angle? Threaten to leave so I'll offer you a bigger payout? Your appetite is growing, Helena. Be careful it doesn't choke you."
He didn't wait for her to respond. He walked out, pulling the door shut behind him with a decisive click.
The sound echoed through the empty apartment. Helena stood alone in the bathroom, surrounded by the torn foil and broken trust, the black card gleaming on the nightstand like a final insult.