She wasn't in her suburban mansion with the designer wallpaper and the hollow promises. She was in a hotel room, her life packed into one small suitcase, and her marriage was a crime scene she had finally walked away from.
Her phone, sitting on the nightstand, was vibrating again. It was a silent, persistent pulse. She didn't even need to look to know it was Bram. Or perhaps her mother, or her mother-in-law, or some concerned "friend" who had already heard whispers of the storm. She didn't pick it up. Instead, she walked to the window and looked down at the crawling traffic of the city. Everyone down there was rushing to a life that probably made sense. Her life, on the other hand, had become a blank page overnight.
She spent the next hour just sitting in the bathtub, the water scalding hot. She wanted to peel off the skin that Bram had touched, to wash away the scent of Tiara's betrayal that seemed to cling to her memory. But as the steam filled the room, the grief started to harden into something else. It was a cold, sharp clarity. She realized she had spent five years being the "supportive" wife, the one who smoothed over Bram's temper, the one who managed his public image, the one who made sure his home was a sanctuary while he was out turning hers into a dumpster fire.
No more.
After she dressed in the only clean outfit she had-a simple, sharp cream-colored blazer and trousers-she felt a bit more like herself. Or at least, the version of herself she was building from the scrap metal of her old life. She checked her reflection. Her eyes were still a bit puffy, but she covered it with a pair of oversized sunglasses. She looked like a woman on a mission, not a victim.
She went down to the lobby, needing air, needing to move. As she walked toward the exit, her mind went back to the man in the cafe. Arzlan. His card was still tucked in her bag, a small piece of black cardboard that felt heavier than it should. Why had he looked at her like that? Like he knew exactly what had happened? In a city of millions, it felt too coincidental. But then again, men like Arzlan Dirgantara didn't do "coincidence." Everything they did was a calculation.
She decided to head to her favorite boutique. She needed more clothes if she was going to survive the next few weeks of legal battles, and she wasn't about to go back to the house to pick up her old stuff while Bram was there.
The boutique was quiet, the scent of expensive perfume and new fabric filling the air. The salesclerk, a girl named Maya who had helped Nayla many times before, smiled brightly as she walked in.
"Mrs. Bram! So good to see you. We just got some new pieces from-" Maya stopped mid-sentence, her eyes traveling over Nayla's face. Even with the sunglasses, the tension was obvious. "Are you okay, ma'am?"
"I'm fine, Maya. I just need a new wardrobe. Everything. From basics to evening wear," Nayla said, her voice clipped.
"Oh! A trip?"
"Something like that," Nayla replied, her heart stinging. A trip to a new reality.
As she moved through the racks, picking out pieces that were sharper, darker, and more aggressive than her usual "soft" style, her phone rang again. This time, it wasn't a hidden number. It was her lawyer, Hendra.
"Nayla, we have a problem," Hendra said as soon as she picked up.
"What is it?"
"Bram is contesting the freeze on the accounts. He's claiming that the funds are tied to his business operations and that you're 'emotionally unstable' and trying to sabotage his livelihood. He's already filed an emergency motion."
Nayla gripped a silk blouse so hard she almost tore it. "Emotionally unstable? He's the one who cheated in our own bed!"
"I know, Nayla. But in the eyes of the law, especially with his connections, he's playing the 'distraught husband' card. He's telling everyone you disappeared in a fit of rage and he's worried about your safety. It's a classic move to make you look like the problem."
"He's trying to starve me out," she whispered, her blood turning to ice. "He knows I don't have much in my personal savings because I kept reinvesting into our joint ventures."
"Exactly. He's trying to force you to come home so he can control the narrative. If you don't have access to your money, he thinks you'll crawl back."
Nayla hung up the phone. She felt a wave of nausea. She looked at the piles of clothes she had picked out. She couldn't afford them. Not if her accounts were frozen. Not if she was going to have to pay for this hotel and a lawyer out of the small amount of cash she had left.
She felt the walls closing in again. Bram was good at this. He was a manipulator. He knew her weaknesses, her fears, and her pride. He knew she would hate the idea of people thinking she was "crazy."
She walked out of the boutique without buying anything, ignoring Maya's confused look. She walked down the street, the midday heat of Jakarta pressing against her. She felt small. She felt defeated. For all her talk about being a "queen," she was just a woman with a frozen bank account and a husband who was ready to ruin her to save himself.
She sat on a bench in a small plaza, the noise of the city a dull roar in her ears. She reached into her bag for a tissue, but her fingers brushed against something else.
The black card.
*Arzlan Dirgantara.*
She pulled it out and looked at it. It was a gamble. A huge one. A man like Arzlan didn't give out favors for free. If he offered help, it would come with a price. But what choice did she have? Stay in this hotel until her credit cards were declined? Go back to Bram and pretend everything was okay while he continued to see Tiara?
No. Never.
She took a deep breath and dialed the number on the card.
It rang three times before a smooth, professional voice answered. "Dirgantara's private line. Who is calling?"
"It's... Nayla. Nayla... I met Mr. Dirgantara this morning."
There was a pause, a brief moment of silence that felt like an eternity. "One moment, please."
She waited, her heart hammering against her ribs. She felt like she was standing on the edge of a cliff, waiting for someone to either pull her back or push her off.
"Nayla."
The voice was deep, resonant, and unmistakably Arzlan's. He didn't sound surprised. He sounded like he had been waiting for the call.
"Mr. Dirgantara," she said, trying to keep her voice steady. "You said if the world felt smaller than I thought... I should call."
"And? Is it getting cramped?"
"He's freezing my accounts. He's telling people I'm unstable. He's trying to erase me before I can even leave."
"I know," Arzlan said simply.
Nayla froze. "You know? How?"
"I make it my business to know things, Nayla. Especially when it involves people who interest me. Bram is a loud man. Loud men leave trails. He's been calling everyone in his circle this morning, playing the victim. It's a pathetic display."
"I don't need a play-by-play of my own ruin," she snapped, her frustration boiling over. "I called because... honestly, I don't know why I called. I just refuse to let him win."
"Good. That's the right attitude," Arzlan said, his tone softening just a fraction. "Meet me at the Sky Lounge at 7 PM. Don't go back to your hotel first. My driver is already on his way to your current location."
"Wait, how do you know where I-"
"See you at seven, Nayla."
The line went dead.
Nayla stared at her phone. A mix of fear and curiosity swirled in her gut. He had a driver coming for her? He knew where she was sitting on a random bench in the middle of the city? It was terrifying, but at the same time, it was the first time in twenty-four hours she felt like someone was actually on her side-even if that "someone" was a shark.
Ten minutes later, a black luxury SUV pulled up to the curb. A man in a dark suit stepped out, his eyes scanning the crowd until they landed on her. He walked over with a polite nod.
"Mrs. Nayla? Mr. Dirgantara sent me. Please, step inside."
Nayla didn't hesitate. She got in. The interior of the car was cool, quiet, and smelled of expensive leather. As the car pulled into traffic, she looked out the tinted window. She was leaving her old life behind, one block at a time.
The Sky Lounge was one of those places that felt like it existed above the real world. It was all glass and chrome, perched on the 60th floor of a skyscraper, overlooking the shimmering lights of Jakarta. It was a place for people who owned the world, not for people whose lives were falling apart.
When she walked in, the hostess didn't even ask for her name. She just led Nayla to a private corner booth, hidden behind a decorative screen of frosted glass.
Arzlan was already there. He was wearing a different suit now-a deep navy that made his eyes look even colder. He was sipping a glass of amber liquid, looking out at the city. When he saw her, he didn't stand up, but he gestured to the seat across from him.
"You're late," he said.
"Traffic," she replied, sitting down. She didn't apologize.
He studied her for a moment, his gaze uncomfortably intense. "You look better than you did this morning. The anger suits you."
"I'm not here for compliments, Mr. Dirgantara."
"Call me Arzlan. We're beyond formalities now, don't you think?" He pushed a folder across the table toward her.
Nayla opened it. Inside were copies of her own bank statements, her marriage certificate, and a list of Bram's offshore accounts that she didn't even know existed. There were also photos-not just of Bram and Tiara, but of Bram meeting with several business rivals of the Dirgantara Group.
"What is this?" she asked, her voice trembling.
"Bram isn't just a bad husband, Nayla. He's a bad businessman. He's been leaking information to my competitors in exchange for personal favors. I've been watching him for months, waiting for the right moment to cut him out. And then, he did something incredibly stupid."
"He cheated on me?"
"No," Arzlan said, leaning forward. "He made you his enemy. And you, Nayla, are the only person who has the keys to his digital safe. He uses your name for half his shell companies because he thought you were too 'perfect' to ever look at the fine print."
Nayla felt a jolt of realization. She had signed so many papers over the years, trusting Bram when he said it was for their "future." She had been his shield, his legal cover.
"So you want me to help you take him down," she said, her voice hardening. "This isn't about helping me. It's about your business."
"It can be both," Arzlan replied. "I get what I want-Bram neutralized and his assets absorbed. And you? You get your freedom, your dignity, and a settlement that will make sure you never have to worry about a frozen bank account again."
"And the catch? You mentioned a contract this morning."
Arzlan took a slow sip of his drink. "The catch is that I need a wife. Or at least, the world needs to think I have one."
Nayla blinked. "What?"
"My grandfather is the chairman of the board. He's old-fashioned. He believes a man can't lead the Dirgantara empire properly unless he has a stable home life. He's been pushing me to marry a woman of his choosing-a daughter of one of his business partners. I have no intention of doing that."
"So you want a fake marriage."
"I want a partnership," Arzlan corrected. "One year. You play the role of my wife. You attend the events, you live in my house, you show the world that I am a settled man. In return, I provide you with the best legal team in the country to crush Bram. I provide you with a monthly allowance that would make a queen jealous. And at the end of the year, we 'divorce' amicably, and you walk away with enough money to start whatever life you want."
Nayla sat in silence, the weight of the proposal sinking in. It was insane. It was something out of a movie. But as she looked at the photos of Bram and Tiara, the anger in her chest flared up again.
Bram wanted to ruin her. He wanted to make her a beggar.
Arzlan was offering her a throne.
"Why me?" she asked. "There are thousands of women who would jump at this. Women who aren't currently in the middle of a messy scandal."
"Because you have nothing left to lose," Arzlan said, his voice dropping to a low, dangerous level. "And because I saw the look in your eyes this morning. You don't want peace, Nayla. You want justice. And I'm the only one who can give it to you."
He pulled out a pen and a single sheet of paper from the folder. It was a simple agreement, written in plain language. No legal jargon, just the terms they had discussed.
"One year," he said. "No strings. No feelings. Just a contract."
Nayla looked at the pen. She thought about the bedroom door she had pushed open. She thought about the rain. She thought about the cold, empty hotel room.
She picked up the pen.
"There's one more thing," she said, looking him dead in the eye. "I want to be the one who tells Tiara she's lost."
Arzlan's lips curled into a faint, dark smile. "I wouldn't have it any other way."
Nayla signed her name.
As she put the pen down, she felt a strange sense of calm. The world wasn't ending anymore. It was changing. She was no longer Nayla, the betrayed wife. She was Nayla, the woman who had just sold her soul to the devil to get her revenge.
"Welcome to the family, Nayla," Arzlan said, raising his glass.
She didn't raise hers. She just looked at him, knowing that from this moment on, her life would never be the same. She had stepped into a world of shadows and power, and there was no turning back.
The rest of the night was a blur. Arzlan's team moved with frightening efficiency. By the time she left the Sky Lounge, her hotel room had been paid for, her belongings were being moved to a "secure location," and a press release was already being drafted.
But as she sat in the back of the SUV, headed toward her new life, she couldn't help but wonder if she had just traded one cage for another. Bram's cage had been built of lies and neglect. Arzlan's cage was built of gold and secrets.
Which one was more dangerous?
She looked at her hand, where her wedding ring used to be. The skin was still pale, a ghostly reminder of the woman she used to be. She rubbed it, as if trying to erase the memory.
Tomorrow, the world would wake up to the news that Nayla and Bram were over, and that the city's most eligible bachelor had found his match. Tomorrow, the war would truly begin.
And for the first time in her life, Nayla was ready to fight.
As the car pulled up to the gates of a massive estate on the outskirts of the city, she saw the lights of the main house. It was a fortress. It was a palace. And for the next year, it was her home.
The gates opened slowly, and the car rolled forward.
Nayla took a deep breath.
*Watch out, Bram,* she thought. *The queen is back. And she's not alone.*
The car stopped in front of the grand entrance. A butler opened the door, bowing low.
"Welcome home, Mrs. Dirgantara."
Nayla stepped out into the cool night air. She looked up at the stars, feeling the weight of the contract in her bag. It was a long way from the rain-soaked bedroom, but the journey had just begun.
She walked into the house, her heels clicking on the marble floor. Every step was a declaration of war. Every breath was a promise of revenge.
She was no longer running. She was coming for everything they took from her. And with Arzlan Dirgantara at her side, she knew the world wouldn't just listen. It would tremble.