"How did you get this number?" Elena snapped, her grip tightening on the mug.
"Did you think a divorce paper could actually cut the cord between us? I know everything about you, Elena. Including the fact that your father's ancestral land in the valley just went up for public auction this morning."
Elena's heart stopped. "You wouldn't. That land has been in my family for generations. It's the only thing they have left."
"I would," Silas whispered, and she could hear the jagged edge of his smile. "I'm the only bidder. Unless... you come to the old lake house. Alone. One hour, Elena. If I see a single one of Vane's black SUVs, I press 'confirm' on the wire transfer, and your parents are on the street by noon."
The line went dead.
"Where are you going?"
Dante stood at the entrance of the walk-in closet, his eyes narrowed. He was half-dressed, his lean, muscular chest still bearing the faint marks of Elena's fingernails from the night before.
"I have an errand," Elena said, her voice steady even as her hands trembled while she pulled on a pair of leather boots.
Dante was across the room in a heartbeat. He gripped her upper arms, forcing her to look at him. "You're a terrible liar. Your pulse is thundering against your skin. It was him, wasn't it? Silas called."
"He has my family's land, Dante. He's going to take everything they have."
"I'll buy it back," Dante growled, his obsession flaring into a protective rage. "I'll outbid him by double. I'll buy the whole damn valley just to keep you from looking at his name."
"You don't understand," Elena said, pushing against his chest. "He doesn't want the money. He wants to see me break. If you interfere, he'll destroy it just to spite me. I have to go."
Dante's jaw set. "If you go to him, you're choosing him over me."
"No," Elena whispered, reaching up to cup his face. Her eyes were hard, the "Strong FL" energy radiating off her. "I'm choosing my family. And I'm choosing to end this. Stay here, Dante. If I'm not back in two hours, burn everything he has left. But for once... let me handle my own ghost."
Dante looked like he wanted to roar, to chain her to the bed, to keep her safe in his golden cage. But he saw the fire in her eyes-the fire he had fallen for. He stepped back, his voice a low, lethal warning. "Two hours, Elena. After that, I'm coming. And I won't be bringing a checkbook. I'll be bringing a casket."
The lake house was a rotting relic of Silas's childhood. Elena stepped inside, the floorboards groaning under her weight. The air was thick with dust and the smell of stale bourbon.
Silas sat in a high-backed leather chair, a laptop open on the table in front of him. He looked like a ghost of the man she had married.
"You came," he said, his eyes devouring her. "In a car he bought you. Wearing clothes he paid for. Does he know how you taste, Elena? Does he know the sound you make when-"
"Shut up, Silas," Elena interrupted, standing in the center of the room. "The land. Transfer the deed back to my father's name. Now."
Silas laughed, a hollow, terrifying sound. He stood up, walking toward her with a predatory gait. "You think this is a business transaction? I don't want the land. I want the feeling of you under me. I want to remind you that before he ever touched you, you were mine."
He reached out, his fingers trembling as they reached for her throat. Elena didn't flinch. She stood her ground, her gaze level and cold.
"I was never yours, Silas. I was a prisoner who escaped."
"You haven't escaped shit!" Silas roared, pinning her against the wall. He pressed his body into hers, his obsession turning into a frantic, desperate heat. "I can smell him on you. It's making me sick. I'm going to wash him off you, Elena. And then, maybe, I'll give your daddy his dirt back."
He fumbled with the buttons of her blouse, his movements clumsy and panicked. Elena let him get close. She let him think he was winning.
And then, she leaned in, her lips grazing his ear.
"Do you know why Dante is better than you, Silas?" she whispered, her voice a seductive poison. "Because he doesn't have to force me. He just has to look at me, and I give him everything. You? You're just a beggar trying to steal a crumb."
Silas froze, his face contorting with a pain so sharp it looked like a physical wound. "You bitch..."
"I'm the bitch who's recording this entire conversation," Elena said, pulling a small, high-tech device from her pocket-one she'd taken from Dante's office. "And I have a live feed going straight to the police and the board of directors who are currently deciding whether or not to press criminal charges for your embezzlement. One more touch, Silas, and I hit 'send'."
Silas backed away as if she had burned him. He looked at the device, then at the woman he thought he could break.
"You used me," he gasped. "You came here just to finish me."
"I came here to show you that I'm the one with the power now," Elena said, walking to the laptop. She didn't wait for his permission. She typed in the transfer code-she still knew all his passwords-and hit 'Enter'.
"The land is back in my family's name," she said, shutting the laptop with a satisfying click. "And you, Silas? You have exactly sixty seconds to run before Dante's security team arrives. And believe me... they aren't here to talk."
As if on cue, the roar of an engine echoed from the driveway.
Elena walked toward the door, not looking back at the broken man in the chair. As she stepped out into the sunlight, a black SUV slid to a halt. Dante jumped out before it even stopped, his face a mask of pure, possessive terror.
He grabbed her, checking her face, her neck, her hands. "Did he touch you? Elena, if he touched you-"
"I handled it, Dante," she said, her voice softening as she leaned into his strength. She was strong, she was a warrior, but in his arms, she allowed herself the one thing she never gave Silas: her vulnerability.
"He's done. Silas Thorne is officially a memory."
Dante looked at the house, then back at her. He picked her up, his grip so tight it was almost painful-the grip of a man who would never, ever let go.
"Good," Dante rasped against her lips. "Because I have a different kind of celebration in mind for the woman who just conquered a king."