The slender plastic stick clattered against the marble bottom of the wastebasket, the sound echoing in the cavernous, silent bathroom. Two pink lines stared up at Ellie, stark and unforgiving. She gripped the edge of the cold marble vanity, her knuckles white, and took a deep, shuddering breath. There was only one path forward.
She had known this day might come. But every time before, she had been meticulous. This slip‑up could only mean one thing: her body and her mind had been worn down by this marriage to their breaking point.
The pregnancy had to be terminated, and this marriage had to end.
Not because she didn't want it-quite the opposite. Deep in some long‑buried corner of her heart, she had even secretly wished for a child of her own flesh and blood. But that child could never be born inside this gilded cage, could never become her vulnerability.
Three years. Three years of playing the gentle, compliant wife from rural Montana, enduring her husband's cold indifference, his family's contempt, and a lethal risk that could expose her secret at any moment. Julian Hayes didn't need her-he needed a vase to display in his home. And she had never been a vase.
Ellie turned on the faucet, the chrome handle cool beneath her trembling fingers. Ice-cold water rushed over her hands, a temporary shock to a system already overloaded. She splashed her face, the chill doing little to calm the frantic hummingbird wings of her heart.
Lifting her head, Ellie met her own eyes in the mirror. Her face was pale, a stark contrast to the luxurious silk of the nightgown that draped her frame-a gift from her husband-Julian, like everything else in this gilded cage. The confusion that had clouded her eyes for months was gone, replaced by a sheet of ice. A cold, hard certainty.
Ellie's fingers went to her neck, to the delicate diamond necklace that was the symbol of her status as Mrs. Hayes. The clasp bit into the skin of her nape as she tore it off. She tossed it onto the vanity, where it lay glittering and obscene next to a porcelain soap dish.
Barefoot, she walked out of the bathroom, the plush Persian rug silencing her steps. The master bedroom was vast, a monument to wealth and emptiness. She crossed it without a glance at the king-sized bed she no longer shared with Julian, heading straight for the walk-in closet.
It was a room in itself, lined with racks of haute couture gowns and designer shoes, all arranged by color and season. She ignored them all. Reaching up to the highest shelf, hidden behind a row of hat boxes, she pulled down a dusty, worn canvas duffel bag. It still smelled faintly of Montana dust and pine. The zipper snagged. She yanked it hard, the harsh, tearing sound ripping through the quiet.
She grabbed a few soft cotton t-shirts and a pair of worn jeans, stuffing them into the bag. Her hands deliberately bypassed the silks and cashmeres that filled the space. A strange sense of lightness filled her chest, the first real breath she'd taken in three years.
A soft, distinct ding echoed from the hallway. The private elevator. Her spine went rigid. He wasn't supposed to be home for hours.
Shoving the duffel bag back into its hiding place, she smoothed down her nightgown and walked out of the closet, through the long bedroom, and toward the main living area.
She reached the edge of the enormous living room just as the ornate double doors to the foyer swung open. Julian Hayes strode in, his presence sucking the air from the room. He shrugged off his custom-tailored Tom Ford suit jacket, tossing it to the waiting butler without a word, his movements sharp with irritation.
His gaze swept the room and landed on her. His eyes, the color of a stormy sea, held no warmth. They assessed her the way he would a stock that was underperforming, an asset about to be liquidated. The temperature in the room dropped ten degrees.
He crossed the marble floor, the sharp click-clack of his leather shoes the only sound. He didn't stop until he was standing over the glass coffee table that separated them.
From his leather briefcase, he pulled a thick manila envelope. With a flick of his wrist, he sent it skidding across the glass. It stopped inches from her bare feet. The embossed logo of a top Manhattan law firm seemed to burn into her retinas. She took an involuntary step back.
Julian shoved his hands in his pockets, looking down at her. "I want this marriage to be over," he said. His voice was flat, devoid of any emotion, as if he were discussing a quarterly report.
Ellie looked down at the envelope. She had expected this, dreamed of it even, but she had always imagined a searing pain in her chest. Instead, there was only a dull ache in her lower abdomen, a secret reminder of the new life that made this ending not just necessary, but urgent.
She bent down, her fingers closing around the stiff paper. The edges were sharp. She pulled out the document inside. Fifty pages. A divorce agreement.
Sitting on the edge of the cream-colored sofa, she scanned the first page, the clauses detailing the division of assets-or rather, the lack thereof for her. A bitter, almost imperceptible smile touched her lips.
Julian watched her, a slight frown creasing his brow. This wasn't the reaction he'd anticipated. Her silence was unsettling.
Ellie reached for the Montblanc pen resting in a holder on the table. She uncapped it, the metal nib catching the light from the chandelier above.
She flipped to the final page, to the line designated for her signature. There was no hesitation. The pen met the paper with a soft, scratching sound. Ellie Hayes.
Julian took a step forward, trying to see what she was doing, his view obscured by the curtain of her long, dark hair. A strange flicker of annoyance went through him.
Finally, a voice said, dripping with relief and contempt. "I can finally get away from this arrogant bastard."
Julian froze. His head snapped up, his eyes darting around the massive, empty room. The butler was a silent statue by the far wall. There was no one else.
His breath hitched. He stared hard at Ellie, his gaze intense enough to burn.
She finished signing and closed the folder. Lifting her head, she met his wild, confused stare with a look of perfect, placid innocence. "Is there a problem?"
He swallowed, the sound loud in the silence. "Did you just say something?" His voice was tight, strained.
Ellie shook her head slowly, a picture of demure confusion.
Not only is he blind to who I really am, now he's hearing things, too, the voice sneered in his head, clear as a bell. Pathetic.
The words hit him like a physical blow. And they were coming from inside his own skull. He felt a dizzying wave of vertigo, the carefully constructed walls of his reality beginning to crack.
Julian stared at Ellie, his mind reeling. He scrutinized her face, searching for any flicker of deceit, any hint that she was the source of the voice mocking him in his own head. But her expression was a placid mask of mild concern. His hands, hanging at his sides, clenched into fists so tight his knuckles ached.
"The agreement," Ellie said, her voice soft, breaking the tense silence. She pushed the signed document across the glass table toward him. The paper whispered against the surface, a sound that grated on his raw nerves. "It's done."
He glanced down at the elegant, flowing signature. Ellie Hayes. She had agreed too quickly, too easily.
"You don't need to worry about the alimony stipulated in the prenuptial agreement," she continued, her tone consistently indifferent. "I don't want any of it. I'll leave with what I came with."
As if I need his dirty money, the voice scoffed inside his head, dripping with disdain. The interest from one of my offshore accounts could buy this entire penthouse ten times over.
Offshore accounts.
The two words detonated in Julian's brain like a grenade. His eyes widened, a jolt of pure shock running through him. He stumbled back a step, the carefully controlled façade of the CEO of Hayes Industries shattering for a brief second.
He pressed the heels of his hands against his temples, a sudden, sharp headache pulsing behind his eyes. This had to be a hallucination. The stress of the latest hostile takeover bid on Wall Street, the long hours, the lack of sleep-it was the only logical explanation.
Ellie rose from the sofa, her movements fluid and graceful. She smoothed a non-existent wrinkle from her silk nightgown, preparing to walk away, to leave him to his apparent breakdown.
"Wait," he bit out, his voice raspy. Acting on pure instinct, he shot his hand out and grabbed her wrist. His grip was like steel, halting her instantly.
She gasped, a sharp intake of breath, and turned to look at him. Her eyes were wide, filled with a convincing performance of fear. "Julian, you're hurting me."
"The offshore accounts," he ground out, his voice low and dangerous, each word a struggle against the chaos in his mind. "What did you just say about offshore accounts?"
Ellie's heart skipped a beat. For a fraction of a second, her composure wavered, but her years of training kicked in. Her face remained a mask of bewildered innocence. "Offshore accounts? I don't know what you're talking about. You must have misheard."
Did this control freak install listening devices in the apartment? the voice in his head demanded, sharp with suspicion and calculation. Is that how he heard me muttering to myself?
Listening devices.
The confirmation was absolute. It wasn't a hallucination. It wasn't stress. He was hearing her thoughts. The realization was so profound, so world-altering, that he felt the floor tilt beneath his feet.
He released her wrist as if he'd been burned. He staggered backward, his legs unsteady, until the back of his thighs hit the hard edge of the marble coffee table. The sharp pain was a welcome anchor to reality.
Ellie watched him, her eyes cold and analytical despite her feigned concern. She took two steps back, creating a safe distance between them. "Are you feeling alright, Julian? Should I call Dr. Evans?"
Perfect, the voice sneered. The great Wall Street tyrant is finally losing his mind. Maybe he'll be committed. That would solve a lot of problems.
Hearing himself diagnosed as insane by the woman he thought he knew, Julian's pale face flushed with a dark, angry red. The sheer force of his CEO persona, the intimidating pressure he used to bend boardrooms to his will, radiated from him in waves.
He needed one more piece of data. One final cross-verification. He forced himself to breathe, to push down the storm of confusion and anger. "How are your relatives in Montana?" he asked, his voice deceptively calm. "I hope they're doing well."
Ellie lowered her gaze, a flicker of something unreadable in her eyes. "They're fine," she said softly. "Thank you for asking."
But in his head, her real answer was a blast of pure derision. Relatives? I haven't been back to that godforsaken farm in eight years. My real family isn't there.
My real family.
The words echoed. Julian's mind, trained to analyze complex data sets and find hidden patterns, went into overdrive. This woman, his wife of three years, the simple, pretty girl from a rural town, was a complete fabrication. Her entire life, as he knew it, was a lie.
His gaze dropped from her face to the signed divorce agreement on the table. A moment ago, it had been his victory, his liberation. Now, it felt like the most idiotic mistake of his life. He couldn't let her go. Not now. Not until he knew everything.
He lunged forward, snatching the thick document off the table. His fingers dug into the paper, creasing it deeply.
Ellie's brow furrowed in genuine confusion. "Is there a legal issue with my signature?"
"This document," Julian said, his voice a low growl as he shoved the papers back into the manila envelope, "requires a final risk assessment from my legal department."
You son of a bitch! her mind screamed, the raw fury a stark contrast to her silent, shocked expression. You go back on your word? I swear, I will shove this agreement down your throat!
Hearing the sheer violence of her thoughts, a strange, dark thrill shot through Julian. It was a perverse satisfaction, a primal urge to conquer this unknown, dangerous creature hiding in plain sight.
He didn't give her another glance. Grabbing his briefcase, he turned and strode toward his study at the end of the long hall, the heavy oak door closing behind him with a definitive thud. He left Ellie standing alone in the vast living room, her escape plan in tatters, her face a mask of stunned fury.
Ellie stood frozen in the cavernous living room, staring at the closed study door. The rich mahogany seemed to mock her, a solid barrier between her and her freedom. A primal urge to storm the door, to rip the papers from his hands, surged through her. She took a deep breath, forcing it down. Panic was a luxury she couldn't afford.
She spun on her heel, her silk slippers whispering against the marble. The soft sounds were a stark contrast to the frantic pounding of her heart. This changed nothing. The timeline had just been accelerated.
Pushing open the door to her bedroom, she went straight to the walk-in closet. She didn't hesitate this time, yanking the worn canvas duffel from its hiding spot. Her movements were sharp, efficient. From a locked drawer in her nightstand, she retrieved a slim leather folio. Inside were three passports, each with a different name and nationality, and several thick wads of US dollars and Swiss francs. She shoved them deep into the bag, beneath the t-shirts.
She pulled out her phone, her fingers flying across the encrypted messaging app.
Zurich. Wheels up in 90. Have the car ready at the service exit. -E
The message was sent to a number with no name, just a string of digits. A confirmation blip came back almost instantly.
Inside the study, Julian stood in the dark, his hands braced on the massive, cool surface of his desk. His chest rose and fell in ragged breaths. He closed his eyes, concentrating, pushing his newfound sense to its limit. He had to know what she was doing.
And then, as if she were whispering directly into his ear, he heard it. Zurich. Wheels up in 90. The plan, clear and precise, flooded his mind. He didn't just hear the words; he felt the cold determination behind them.
His eyes snapped open. The ability wasn't diminished by distance or walls. A dangerous glint lit his gaze. A private jet. She had access to a private jet. The scale of her resources, of her deception, was far greater than he had imagined.
He grabbed the divorce agreement from the desk, put it into a leather briefcase, and then called his assistant to deliver the documents to the house, 24/7. Then he turned and strode out of the study, his expensive shoes sinking silently into the plush hall runner, his steps heavy with purpose.
He reached her bedroom door and didn't bother to knock. He grasped the cold brass handle and shoved it open.
The loud noise made Ellie jump. She quickly pushed the passports deeper into her bag and turned, her face instantly morphing into a mask of frightened vulnerability. "Julian? You startled me."
His eyes ignored her, locking onto the shabby canvas bag on the bed. It was so out of place amidst the Frette linens and silk pillows, a piece of a life she was supposed to have left behind. His jaw tightened.
He stepped into the room, pulling the door shut behind him with a heavy click. The sound of the lock engaging was unnervingly loud in the enclosed space.
"The divorce is under review," he said, his voice dangerously low. "So I ask you again, Ellie. Where are you going?"
She lowered her eyes, a picture of wounded innocence. "Home," she whispered, her voice thick with manufactured sadness. "I just... I needed to go back to Montana for a little while. To clear my head."
As if, her mind scoffed. Once I'm out that door, not even the FBI will find a trace of me in Europe.
The mention of the FBI sent a jolt through Julian. This wasn't just a woman with a secret bank account. This was something else entirely. Something far more complex and perilous.
He moved, his large frame blocking the doorway, an immovable mountain of muscle and tailored wool. He was cutting off her only escape route.
Ellie's brow furrowed. "Julian, please move. I need to get my coat." She took a step forward, trying to slip past him.
He shifted his weight, his broad shoulder blocking her path completely. Their bodies brushed against each other. For a fleeting moment, he was close enough to catch her scent. It wasn't the sweet, floral perfume she usually wore. It was something clean, almost sterile, like vanilla mixed with the faint, sharp smell of antiseptic. It was jarringly out of place.
The contact sent her back a step, her hip bumping against the edge of her dressing table. A silver jewelry box rattled.
She looked up at him then, and for the first time, the mask of the timid wife cracked. A sliver of the real Ellie looked out, her eyes as cold and hard as chips of ice. "Get out of my way," she said, her voice low and steady, not a plea but a command.
The tone, the sheer authority in it, sent a shiver down his spine. This was her. This was the voice he'd been hearing in his head.
He didn't move. Instead, he leaned in, planting his hands on the dressing table on either side of her, trapping her in the cage of his arms. Her back was pressed against the mirror.
He lowered his head, his breath warm against her ear. "You're not going anywhere," he murmured, the words a possessive growl, "without my permission."
Her hands came up to press against his chest, her fingers digging into the hard muscle. She was pushing, but it was like trying to move a statue.
Calculate the odds, her mind raced, shockingly calm and analytical. A strike to the carotid sinus would induce syncope. Probability of alerting the security detail outside? High. Alternative: a precise blow to the temple. Risk of permanent damage? Unacceptable. What about a nerve strike to the brachial plexus?
He heard her clinically assessing the best way to knock him unconscious. The cold, precise terminology. The utter lack of fear. A thrill, equal parts rage and a dark, twisted excitement, shot through him. He was facing a predator, not a frightened deer.
He straightened up abruptly, putting a foot of space between them. He stared down at her, his expression a mixture of fury and awe. This woman, his wife, was a beautiful, dangerous, captivating enigma. And she was his to solve.