Fiona stepped onto the crushed gravel driveway of the Ellison estate. The early autumn wind sliced straight through her thin, faded canvas jacket. She wrapped her arms tightly around her ribs, her fingers digging into the worn fabric. Her teeth chattered, a physical reaction to both the dropping temperature and the anxiety pooling in her gut.
She lifted her head and looked at the massive, brightly lit mansion. The faint, rhythmic pulse of jazz music drifted through the crisp air. The sound made her heart stutter in her chest. She had spent three years in a concrete cell dreaming of this exact moment, but now, a cold knot of dread formed in the pit of her stomach.
She dragged her battered canvas duffel bag toward the front entrance. The heavy rubber wheels scraped loudly against the gravel. The sound was harsh, a gritty reminder of the exhaustion that had seeped into her bones over the last thousand days.
Fiona reached out and wrapped her freezing fingers around the heavy brass door handle. It was unlatched. The door gave way under her touch, pushed open by the sheer volume of the party inside. She sucked in a sharp breath, filling her lungs with courage, and pushed the heavy oak door wide open.
A wave of suffocating heat washed over her. It smelled of expensive champagne, roasted meats, and heavy floral perfumes. The rich scents violently clashed with the sharp, sterile smell of bleach and rust that was permanently burned into her nasal passages. Her stomach lurched. A wave of dizziness hit her so hard she had to grip the doorframe to stay upright.
Arthur, the head butler, was crossing the grand foyer with a silver tray of champagne flutes. He stopped dead in his tracks when he saw her. His eyes widened in absolute shock. His hands began to tremble violently. The heavy silver tray slipped from his grip and crashed onto the marble floor.
The shattering of crystal echoed like a gunshot. The lively chatter of the party died instantly. The jazz music seemed to fade into white noise. Every single head in the massive room turned toward the entrance. Hundreds of eyes locked onto Fiona, pinning her to the spot like a specimen under a microscope.
Fiona forced her legs to move. She let go of the doorframe and walked straight into the room, ignoring the heavy stares. The wealthy, impeccably dressed guests instinctively took a step back as she approached. They parted like the Red Sea, creating a wide, empty path. The physical distance they put between themselves and her felt like a slap to the face. The air grew thick with unspoken disgust.
Fiona kept her chin high, her eyes frantically scanning the sea of faces. The layers of silk, velvet, and tailored suits blurred together. Her chest tightened. Her breathing grew shallow as panic started to claw at her throat. Where was he?
The crowd shifted again, opening a clear line of sight toward the massive stone fireplace. Fiona stopped breathing. She saw Cecil. He was standing there, holding a crystal glass, looking exactly as handsome and untouchable as the day she went away. Tears instantly flooded her eyes, burning her cold skin.
Cecil turned his head and met her gaze. The relaxed, lazy expression on his face vanished. His features turned to stone. His jaw clenched so tight a muscle ticked in his cheek. There was no relief in his eyes. There was no love. There was only raw, unfiltered repulsion.
Then, Fiona saw the woman standing next to him. Kimberly. Kimberly had her arm looped intimately through Cecil's. Fiona's lungs stopped working. The air was sucked completely out of the room.
Fiona stared at the fabric clinging to Kimberly's body. It was a custom emerald green haute couture gown. Fiona recognized every single stitch. She had designed that dress herself, just weeks before she took the fall and went to prison. Bile rose hot and acidic in the back of her throat. Her stomach cramped so violently she had to bite the inside of her cheek to keep from gagging.
Kimberly let out a small, dramatic gasp. She covered her mouth with her manicured hand and shrank back, pressing her body flush against Cecil's chest. It was a calculated move. Cecil immediately shifted his weight, pulling Kimberly closer, his broad shoulders shielding her.
Fiona opened her mouth to speak. Her throat was completely dry.
"Cecil," she rasped.
The sound was pathetic. It was a broken, gravelly whisper that barely carried over the silence of the room.
Cecil did not take a single step toward her. Instead, he wrapped his arm around Kimberly's waist, pulling her entirely behind his back. That simple, protective gesture hit Fiona harder than a physical blow. It shattered the last fragile piece of hope she had been clinging to for three years.
Suddenly, a high-pitched laugh broke the tension. Seven-year-old Jefferey ran into the living room, holding a piece of frosted cake. The sound of her son's voice sent a violent jolt of electricity through Fiona's veins. Her heart slammed against her ribs.
She dropped her canvas bag. It hit the floor with a dull thud. Fiona fell to her knees, the hard wood bruising her skin. She threw her arms wide open. Tears spilled over her eyelashes and tracked down her dirty cheeks.
"Jefferey," she sobbed, her voice cracking with desperate love.
Jefferey stopped running. He stood a few feet away and stared at her. For a fleeting, agonizing second, a flicker of deep, buried recognition crossed his small face. His brow furrowed in innocent confusion as he looked at the tears tracking through the dirt on Fiona's cheeks. He opened his mouth, a soft, questioning sound forming in his throat. But then, his gaze darted past Fiona and landed directly on Kimberly. Kimberly's eyes narrowed into a sharp, terrifyingly subtle glare, a silent command that the boy clearly understood. The confusion in Jefferey's eyes vanished instantly, followed quickly by a conditioned disgust. He took two large steps backward, creating physical distance between them.
He spun around and ran straight toward the fireplace. He bypassed Fiona entirely and threw himself at Kimberly. He hid behind the folds of the emerald green dress, wrapping his small arms tightly around Kimberly's legs.
Kimberly looked down and gently stroked Jefferey's hair. As she did, she tilted her head and looked at Fiona out of the corner of her eye. The corners of Kimberly's mouth twitched upward into a slow, victorious smirk. The silent mockery made Fiona's blood run cold.
Jefferey peeked out from behind the green silk. He pointed a sticky finger right at Fiona.
"Go away, bad woman!" he yelled.
His high, clear voice sliced through the air like a serrated knife, plunging straight into Fiona's chest. She physically doubled over, gasping for air as the pain radiated through her entire body.
The guests around them began to whisper. The harsh hisses of gossip filled the room. They called her a criminal. They wondered how she had the nerve to show her face. The toxic words surrounded Fiona, suffocating her.
Fiona knelt on the floor, her empty arms still suspended in the air. Her hands began to shake uncontrollably. Cold sweat broke out across her forehead and slid down her spine. She slowly lowered her arms and pushed herself up from the floor. She looked at Cecil, silently begging him to fix this, to say something.
Cecil did not look at her. He raised his free hand and snapped his fingers at the security detail standing near the wall. It was a cold, dismissive gesture. He was throwing her out like a stray dog.
Two massive men in black suits stepped forward. They moved quickly, positioning their large bodies directly between Fiona and her family. They formed a solid wall of muscle, completely cutting off her line of sight to her son.
One of the guards reached out and grabbed Fiona's upper arm. His massive fingers dug painfully into her bicep, bruising the muscle. The sharp pain sent a rush of adrenaline straight to her brain. The humiliation burned away, leaving only pure, white-hot pride.
Fiona violently yanked her arm out of the guard's grip. She rolled her shoulders back and forced her spine perfectly straight. The tears dried up instantly. The despair in her chest hardened into solid ice. She leveled a dead, freezing stare at the guard.
She looked past the broad shoulders of the security team and locked eyes with Cecil. Her gaze was sharp enough to draw blood. In that single, silent moment, she took every memory of their marriage, every sacrifice she had made, and buried it deep in the dirt.
Cecil finally looked away. He raised his crystal glass toward the crowd. He offered a smooth, practiced apology for the interruption and told the band to resume playing. The jazz started up again, loud and cheerful, entirely erasing Fiona's existence from the room.
Fiona sucked in a lungful of oxygen, letting the cold air fuel the fire igniting in her veins. She lunged forward and shoved the black-suited security guard squarely in the chest. The guard, hesitant to cause a physical brawl in the middle of a high-society party, stumbled backward. The physical resistance gave way, and Fiona stepped right through the gap.
She marched toward the center of the living room. The sharp heels of her scuffed boots cracked against the polished hardwood floor like gunfire. Each step was heavy with absolute, destructive finality. The guests, sensing the shift in her energy, scrambled backward, pressing themselves against the walls to avoid her path.
Cecil scowled. He dropped his arm from Kimberly's waist and took a large stride forward, placing his massive frame directly in Fiona's way. His broad chest blocked her path completely.
"Stop acting like a lunatic and leave quietly," he demanded, his voice a low, furious rumble.
Fiona stopped walking. She planted her feet and tilted her head up to meet his furious gaze. The submissive, eager-to-please wife he remembered was completely gone. Her eyes were dark and hollow.
"I want a divorce," she stated, her voice carrying to every corner of the room.
The words hung in the air, heavy and suffocating. The entire room went dead silent. The jazz band faltered and stopped playing. Cecil's eyes widened in sheer disbelief. The muscles in his face went slack for a fraction of a second, as if she had just spoken to him in a foreign language.
Kimberly peeked out from behind Cecil's broad shoulder. She forced her eyes to water, blinking rapidly to make the tears pool. She took a tiny, hesitant step forward.
"Fiona, please, just calm down. Don't ruin the evening," Kimberly begged, her voice dripping with sickening sweetness.
Kimberly reached out her manicured hand and gently placed her fingers on Fiona's forearm. The gesture was meant to look forgiving, the gracious hostess pitying the madwoman. The moment Kimberly's skin made contact with her jacket, Fiona's stomach violently convulsed. A wave of pure, unfiltered revulsion shot through her nervous system.
Fiona reacted on pure instinct. She ripped her arm away, twisted her torso, and swung her right hand with every ounce of strength she possessed. Her palm connected with Kimberly's heavily contoured cheek. The slap echoed through the massive living room with a sharp, explosive crack.
Kimberly let out a shrill scream. The force of the blow spun her around, and her knees buckled. She collapsed onto the expensive Persian rug in a heap of emerald silk. She immediately brought her hands up to cover her rapidly swelling cheek, her fake tears instantly replaced by real, stinging ones.
Cecil let out a guttural roar. He lunged forward and clamped his massive hand around Fiona's wrist. His fingers dug into her flesh like steel vices. The pressure was agonizing. He squeezed so hard Fiona felt the bones in her wrist grind together, threatening to snap under his grip.
Fiona sucked in a sharp breath through her teeth, her vision spotting black from the sudden, blinding pain. But she refused to make a sound. She locked her jaw, her teeth grinding together, and stared straight up into Cecil's eyes, her own gaze burning with pure, unadulterated hatred.
Cecil shoved her backward. The violent push sent Fiona stumbling. He didn't even watch to see if she fell. He immediately dropped to one knee on the rug, wrapping his arms around Kimberly's trembling shoulders, pulling her against his chest in a display of absolute devotion.
Fiona caught her balance, her boots sliding slightly on the polished wood. She stood there, her wrist throbbing with a dull, heavy ache, and watched her husband cradle the woman who had ruined her life. A harsh, bitter laugh scraped its way up her throat and spilled from her lips.
"Did you forget who was actually driving the car three years ago?" Fiona screamed, pointing a shaking finger at the couple on the floor.
The words ripped through the room. Kimberly's body jerked violently in Cecil's arms, a physical flinch that gave her away.
Cecil snapped his head up, his eyes blazing with fury.
"You are completely unhinged! It is pathetic that you are still trying to frame Kimberly for your own crimes!" he shouted over her.
The absolute certainty in his voice made Fiona's chest cave in. The injustice of it literally made it hard to breathe.
Kimberly buried her face in Cecil's tailored jacket. She shook her head frantically, her voice muffled as she sobbed that she had nothing to do with the accident. Her performance was flawless, cementing Cecil's blind, unwavering belief in her innocence.
Fiona took a step closer, her voice dropping to a deadly, precise pitch.
"Remember the smell of the perfume on the passenger seat of the wrecked Porsche," she said.
It was a detail only the three of them knew. She threw the truth right in his face, waiting for the realization to hit him.
Cecil just sneered. He let out a harsh, mocking sound. He looked at Fiona like she was dirt beneath his shoes.
"You are sick in the head for inventing such desperate lies just to clear your own name," he said.
The absolute rejection of the truth hit Fiona like a physical wall.
The whispers around the room grew louder. The guests pointed at Fiona, their faces twisted in disgust, calling her a monster for attacking a traumatized woman. The collective hatred pressed down on Fiona from all sides, suffocating her in a vacuum of isolation.
Fiona closed her eyes. She took a slow, deep breath, pulling the cold air deep into her lungs. She swallowed the massive lump of grief and injustice burning in her throat. When she opened her eyes again, the frantic desperation was completely gone. Only ice remained.
She looked down at Cecil, her face completely void of emotion.
"My lawyer will send the divorce papers to your office tomorrow morning," she stated.
Her voice was flat, mechanical, and completely devoid of the love she had harbored for him for years. The sudden shift in her demeanor made Cecil's chest tighten with an unfamiliar panic.
He quickly masked the panic with rage. He stood up, towering over her.
"If you walk out that door, you will not get a single red cent of my money," he spat, trying to use his wealth as a weapon.
Fiona slowly dragged her eyes down to the emerald dress pooled on the floor around Kimberly. She curled her lip in disgust.
"Keep the money. Everything in this house makes me feel physically sick," she said.
The insult hit its mark, draining the color from Kimberly's face.
Fiona turned her back on them. She walked toward the grand, sweeping staircase that led to the second floor. Her spine was rigid, her shoulders pulled back. She left the chaos and the staring eyes behind her, her focus narrowing to a single goal.
"Stop right there!" Cecil roared, his voice echoing off the high ceilings.
He was desperate to maintain his authority, to control the narrative. Fiona did not even pause. Her boots continued to hit the stairs in a steady, rhythmic march.
Arthur, the butler, hurried to the base of the stairs, holding his hands out to block her path. He looked terrified, caught between his boss's orders and his own discomfort. Fiona didn't slow down. She marched right up to him, stopping mere inches from his trembling hands. "Arthur," she whispered, her voice a low, gravelly rasp that carried the weight of a thousand sleepless nights. "You watched me raise that boy. Don't make me humiliate you in front of this entire room." She shot Arthur a look so lethal, so full of dark promise, that the older man physically flinched and stepped aside.
Fiona climbed the stairs, her boots sinking into the plush velvet runner. Below her, the jazz band awkwardly started playing again, a surreal, cheerful soundtrack to the destruction of her life. The music made her skin crawl. She picked up her pace, desperate to escape the suffocating atmosphere of the first floor.
She reached the second-floor landing. She looked at the walls. Every single painting, every photograph of her and Cecil, had been stripped away. In their place hung massive, glossy portraits of Kimberly. The visual invasion made Fiona's stomach churn violently.
She walked down the long corridor and stopped in front of the heavy double doors of the master bedroom. She reached out and wrapped her hand around the custom crystal doorknob. The cold glass grounded her. She just needed to grab her personal documents and leave.
She pushed down on the handle and shoved the door open. Instantly, a thick, cloying cloud of Bulgarian rose perfume hit her in the face. It was Kimberly's signature scent. The smell coated the back of Fiona's throat, a sickening prelude to the ultimate humiliation waiting inside.
Fiona stepped over the threshold into the master bedroom. The heavy, suffocating stench of Bulgarian rose perfume coated her tongue. It was thick and artificial, clinging to every surface of the room. Fiona's throat closed up, her body physically rejecting the air in the space she had once called her sanctuary.
She looked around the massive room. The cool, minimalist tones she had carefully selected years ago had been completely eradicated. The walls were now covered in a gaudy, metallic pink wallpaper. Heavy gold accents gleamed under the chandelier. The aggressive visual clash made Fiona's head throb with a sudden, sharp ache.
She walked slowly toward the massive marble vanity. The surface was entirely covered in expensive glass skincare bottles, scattered makeup brushes, and velvet jewelry boxes. There was not a single trace of Fiona left. The reality of her replacement settled heavily in her chest, a cold, hard stone pressing against her lungs.
Fiona turned and marched toward the walk-in closet. She grabbed the brass handle of the sliding door and yanked it open with brutal force. The racks, once filled with her meticulously tailored suits and haute couture gowns, were completely empty of her belongings. In their place hung rows of brightly colored, sequined dresses and fur coats. The sight made her vision blur with hot, angry tears.
A floorboard creaked in the hallway. A young maid rushed up to the open bedroom door, stopping abruptly when she saw Fiona. The girl's eyes darted nervously to the floor, her hands twisting her apron into knots.
"Ma'am," she stammered out, a quiet, terrified greeting.
Fiona snapped her head toward the door. Her eyes were completely devoid of warmth.
"Where are my things?" she demanded.
The sheer authority in Fiona's voice made the young girl flinch backward.
The maid pointed a trembling finger down the long, shadowed hallway toward the back of the house.
"Mr. Ellison ordered everything to be packed up and thrown into the storage room," she whispered.
The words hit Fiona's chest like a physical blow, knocking the wind out of her.
Fiona didn't scream. She didn't cry. She simply turned her back on the trembling maid and walked down the hallway. Her boots hit the floorboards with a steady, rhythmic thud. With every step she took away from the master bedroom, the lingering warmth she held for her past life evaporated into the cold air.
She reached the end of the hall and stopped in front of the narrow wooden door of the storage room. She grabbed the rusted brass knob and twisted it hard. The hinges let out a high-pitched, agonizing shriek as she pushed the door open. A thick cloud of stale air, heavy with the smell of mold and undisturbed dust, rushed into her face.
Fiona reached up and yanked the frayed string hanging from the ceiling. The single, bare bulb flickered violently before finally casting a sickly yellow glow over the room. The space was crammed floor to ceiling with black plastic garbage bags and crushed cardboard boxes.
She walked over to the nearest pile and dropped to her knees. She grabbed the thick plastic of a garbage bag, the cheap material scraping roughly against her cold fingers. She dug her nails in and ripped the bag open, the plastic tearing with a loud, aggressive sound.
A pile of her old, comfortable sweaters spilled out onto the dirty floor, tangled with several thick, bound movie scripts. Fiona picked up one of the scripts. The edges of the paper were curled and spotted with dark green mold. A sharp pang of grief hit her chest. Her career, her passion, left to rot in the dark.
She tossed the ruined script aside and dragged a heavy cardboard box toward her. The movement kicked up a cloud of dust that coated the back of her throat, sending her into a fit of harsh, dry coughing. As she pushed the flaps open, a glint of dull metal caught the yellow light. It was her Best Actress trophy.
Fiona reached into the box. The heavy golden statue had been thrown carelessly at the bottom, buried under a pile of broken picture frames. The smooth surface of the trophy was marred by deep, ugly scratches. It was a physical manifestation of how completely Cecil had discarded her worth.
She reached past the trophy and grabbed a wooden picture frame. The glass was completely shattered. As her fingers closed around the wood, a jagged shard of glass sliced deep into the pad of her index finger. A bright bead of blood instantly welled up, dripping down and splashing onto the dusty photograph inside.
Fiona stared at the picture. It was a candid shot from their wedding day. They were laughing, their foreheads pressed together. The blood smeared across Cecil's smiling face. The contrast between the joyful memory and the agonizing reality made Fiona's stomach cramp with nausea. Her eyes went completely dead.
She didn't bother wiping the blood from her hand. She pinched the corner of the photograph and yanked it out of the frame. The broken glass scraped against her skin, slicing another shallow cut into her thumb. She gripped the heavy cardstock in both hands and ripped the photograph straight down the middle.
She tore it again, and again, until the picture was nothing more than a handful of jagged confetti. She opened her hands and let the pieces flutter to the dusty floorboards. As the paper hit the ground, a massive, suffocating weight lifted off her chest. Her lungs expanded, pulling in a full, deep breath for the first time in hours.
Fiona stood up and scanned the room. She spotted a battered, hard-shell suitcase shoved in the corner. She dragged it out, her muscles straining against the weight. She grabbed the zipper and yanked it. The metal teeth caught and ground together, fighting her, but she forced it open with a violent tug.
She knelt back down and began sorting through the bags. She bypassed the velvet boxes containing the diamond necklaces and heavy gold bracelets Cecil had bought her, kicking them away with the toe of her boot. She only grabbed her faded jeans, plain t-shirts, and her passport. She was leaving with exactly what she came with.
She reached back into the cardboard box and wrapped her bleeding fingers around the base of the Best Actress trophy. The metal was freezing cold against her skin. The heavy weight of it anchored her. It was the only thing in this house she had earned with her own blood and sweat.
She grabbed a soft wool scarf from the pile and carefully wrapped it around the scratched metal statue. Her movements were slow, gentle, and fiercely protective. She placed the bundled trophy right in the center of her suitcase, burying it under her clothes.
Suddenly, the floorboards in the hallway groaned under a heavy weight. The aggressive, unmistakable sound of hard leather dress shoes striking the wood echoed down the corridor. The footsteps were fast and furious, carrying a wave of dark, violent energy straight toward her.
Fiona grabbed the lid of the suitcase and slammed it shut. She gripped the zipper and pulled it around the track, the metal screaming in the quiet room. She slowly pushed herself up from the floor and turned to face the open doorway.
Cecil's massive frame suddenly filled the doorframe. His broad shoulders completely blocked the dim light spilling in from the hallway, plunging the small storage room into deep shadow. His chest heaved, his tie loosened, his face twisted into an ugly mask of rage.
He looked down at the torn garbage bags, the shattered glass, and finally, the packed suitcase resting against Fiona's leg. The muscles in his jaw flexed violently.
"What the hell kind of stunt are you trying to pull?" he demanded, letting out a harsh breath.
Fiona wiped her bloody fingers on the side of her jeans. She lifted her chin and stared directly into his furious eyes. Her heartbeat was steady. Her breathing was calm. The absolute lack of fear in her gaze was a weapon all its own.
"Is throwing my life into the garbage your idea of honoring your wedding vows?" she asked, her voice dripping with venom, pointing a trembling finger at the piles of trash bags.
The words hit him hard, causing his chest to stutter in its rhythmic heaving.
Cecil's eyes darted away for a fraction of a second. He scowled, his upper lip curling in distaste. He crossed his arms over his chest.
"The housekeeping staff took it upon themselves to clear the room," he muttered.
The blatant, cowardly lie made Fiona's blood boil.
She let out a sharp, humorless laugh. She reached down and wrapped her hand tightly around the cold plastic handle of her suitcase. The wheels clattered loudly against the wood floor as she pulled it upright. She squared her shoulders, ready to rip her way out of this house.