The match flared to life, a small, violent burst of orange in the dim room. Evangeline Watson watched the flame eat its way down the wood, the smell of sulfur briefly masking the scent of the expensive roast cooling on the dining table. It was the third time she had lit the candle. The third time she had waited for the wax to pool and harden, counting the minutes until the flame threatened to burn her fingertips.
She blew it out. Smoke curled up in a thin, grey ribbon, disappearing into the high ceilings of the Manhattan penthouse that never quite felt like a home. It felt like a museum exhibit where she was the unauthorized visitor.
Evangeline picked up her phone. No messages. No missed calls. The screen was a black mirror reflecting her own pale, anxious face. It was their third wedding anniversary.
She touched the small velvet box sitting next to his empty plate. Inside was a platinum tie clip she had designed herself, embedding a small sapphire on the underside where only he would know it existed. It was subtle. Quiet. Just like their marriage.
Earlier that morning, Cedric Malone had looked right through her while drinking his espresso. He hadn't mentioned the date. He hadn't even mentioned the weather. He had just checked his watch, adjusted his cuffs, and left.
The silence in the apartment was heavy, pressing against her eardrums. It was a physical weight, suffocating and cold.
Then, the phone rang.
The sound was so sharp in the quiet room that Evangeline flinched, her knee knocking against the table leg. She scrambled to grab it, her heart leaping into her throat. Cedric. It had to be him. He was late, he was sorry, he was on his way.
But the name on the screen wasn't Cedric.
St. Jude's Hospital.
The blood drained from her face so fast it left her dizzy. Her fingers trembled as she slid the icon to answer.
"Hello?" Her voice was a cracked whisper.
"Mrs. Malone? This is Dr. Vance." The voice on the other end was professional, clipped, and devoid of the warmth doctors usually tried to fake. "I'm calling regarding your grandmother, Nana Watson."
"Is she okay?" Evangeline stood up, her chair scraping loudly against the floor. "Did she fall again?"
"You need to come to the hospital immediately, Mrs. Malone. She's gone into cardiac arrest. We are doing everything we can, but..."
The rest of the sentence turned into a buzz of white noise. Evangeline's knees buckled, and she had to grab the edge of the dining table to keep from hitting the floor. The room tilted.
"I'm coming," she gasped.
She didn't grab a coat. She didn't blow out the other candles. She grabbed her car keys, leaving the anniversary gift sitting on the table like a tombstone for a marriage that was already dead, and ran out the door.
The rain in New York was unforgiving. It slashed against the windshield of her modest sedan, blurring the neon lights of the city into streaks of red and yellow. Evangeline drove with a desperation that bordered on madness. She honked at a yellow cab that drifted into her lane, her hand slamming against the steering wheel.
"Move!" she screamed, though the driver couldn't hear her. Tears hot and stinging blurred her vision, mixing with the glare of the streetlights.
Nana was all she had. The only person who had ever looked at Evangeline and seen a person, not a burden. Not a charity case. If Nana was gone...
Evangeline abandoned her car at the emergency entrance, ignoring the security guard shouting about a "No Parking" zone. She sprinted through the automatic doors, the smell of antiseptic and floor wax hitting her like a wall.
"Nana Watson," she panted, gripping the reception desk. "Where is she?"
The nurse behind the glass looked up slowly, her eyes pitying. "Room 402. But the doctor is already there."
Evangeline didn't wait for the elevator. She took the stairs, her lungs burning, her legs feeling like lead. She burst into the fourth-floor hallway. It was eerily quiet. Too quiet.
Dr. Vance stepped out of Room 402. He pulled his surgical mask down, his expression grim. He looked at Evangeline, wet hair plastered to her face, chest heaving, and he shook his head slowly.
"I'm sorry, Mrs. Malone."
The words hit her like a physical blow to the stomach. Evangeline stumbled back, her back hitting the cold corridor wall.
"No," she whispered. "No, you said you were trying. You said..."
"We did everything we could. Her heart just... gave out."
Evangeline pushed past him. She had to see. She had to know it wasn't a mistake.
She entered the room. The machines were silent. The monitors were dark. Nana lay on the bed, looking smaller than Evangeline had ever seen her. Her skin was already taking on a waxen, grey pallor.
"Nana?" Evangeline walked to the bedside, her legs trembling so hard she could barely stand. She reached out and took Nana's hand. It was cooling.
A scream built in her throat, a raw, jagged thing, but it got stuck there, choking her. She collapsed onto the side of the bed, burying her face in Nana's sheets, sobbing uncontrollably. The grief was a physical tearing in her chest, a void opening up to swallow her whole.
"Don't leave me," she begged into the silence. "Please, don't leave me here alone."
She stayed there for minutes, maybe hours. Time had lost its shape.
As her sobbing subsided into dry, hacking gasps, a scent drifted to her nose. It was faint, lingering in the air above the antiseptic smell of the hospital.
Heavy. Floral. Cloying.
Evangeline lifted her head, sniffing the air. Nana never wore perfume. She was allergic to strong scents. They gave her migraines.
Evangeline turned to the nurse who was quietly tidying up the medical tray in the corner.
"Who was here?" Evangeline asked. Her voice was hoarse, but there was a sudden, sharp edge to it.
The nurse froze. She didn't turn around immediately. She fidgeted with a clipboard, her shoulders tense.
"Just the medical staff, ma'am," the nurse muttered.
"Liar." Evangeline stood up. The grief was still there, heavy and crushing, but a spark of anger was igniting in the center of it. "I smell it. Someone was here. Someone wearing a strong perfume."
The nurse finally turned. She wouldn't meet Evangeline's eyes. "A... a family friend came by earlier. Just to drop off some flowers. But she left before the cardiac event."
"Who?" Evangeline demanded, stepping closer.
"I... I didn't catch the name."
Evangeline knew that scent. It was a suffocating gardenia, the kind she smelled on Cedric's collars when he came home late. The signature scent that lingered in the elevators of the Malone building.
Chloie Serrano.
Rage, hot and blinding, flared through her veins. Chloie had been here. Chloie, who had made Evangeline's life a living hell for three years, who had mocked Nana's poverty, had been in this room right before Nana died.
Footsteps echoed from the hallway. Firm. Authoritative. The sound of expensive leather shoes hitting linoleum with purpose.
Evangeline turned toward the door just as Cedric Malone walked in.
He was impeccable. His suit was crisp, not a wrinkle in sight, despite the rain outside. He looked like he had just stepped out of a board meeting, which he probably had. He looked entirely out of place in this room of death and grief.
He didn't rush to her. He didn't open his arms. He stopped three feet away, his dark eyes scanning the room, assessing the situation with the cold detachment of a man calculating a loss on a spreadsheet.
"What time did she pass?" Cedric asked, looking past Evangeline to Dr. Vance.
Evangeline stared at her husband. She was shaking, her world had just ended, and he was asking for the time of death like he was checking a train schedule.
"19:42," the doctor replied softly.
Cedric nodded once. He finally looked at Evangeline. There was no softness in his gaze. No pity. Just a mild annoyance, as if her grief was an inconvenience to his evening.
"She was here," Evangeline said, her voice trembling with a mix of sorrow and fury. She pointed a shaking finger at the empty space beside the bed. "Chloie was here."
Cedric frowned, a deep crease appearing between his eyebrows. "Evangeline, stop. You're hysterical."
"I smell her perfume, Cedric! Ask the nurse! She was here, and then Nana died!" Evangeline grabbed Cedric's lapels, desperate for him to believe her, desperate for him to be on her side just this once. "She did something. I know she did."
Cedric peeled her hands off his suit gently but firmly. He held her wrists for a second, creating a distance between them.
"Chloie is at the charity gala tonight. I saw the press photos," Cedric said, his voice calm and patronizing. "You are grieving, and you are imagining things. Don't look for a villain where there isn't one."
"Check the visitor log!" Evangeline screamed, pulling away from him.
Cedric sighed, checking his watch. "The nurse already told me the log hasn't been updated since the morning shift. Evangeline, pull yourself together. Making a scene won't bring her back."
"A scene?" Evangeline laughed, a broken, hysterical sound. "My grandmother is dead, and you're worried about a scene?"
"I have a meeting with the board in an hour," Cedric said, straightening his jacket. "I handled the arrangements. The car is downstairs to take you home."
He turned to leave. Just like that.
Evangeline looked from Nana's still, cold body to her husband's retreating back. The realization hit her harder than the news of the death.
She was alone. Truly, completely alone.
The tears stopped. The shaking stopped. Something inside her chest, something soft and hopeful that she had nurtured for three years of a loveless marriage, finally snapped.
The rain at the cemetery was relentless. It wasn't a cleansing rain; it was a cold, muddy deluge that turned the ground into a sludge of grey and brown. The sky was the color of a bruise.
Evangeline stood by the open grave. Her black dress was soaked through, plastering to her skin, chilling her to the bone. She didn't have an umbrella. She hadn't thought to bring one, and no one had offered to share theirs.
The priest's voice was a drone against the sound of the falling rain, reciting prayers that felt empty and hollow. Evangeline stared at the mahogany casket being lowered into the wet earth. It was a nice casket-Cedric had paid for the best, throwing money at the problem as he always did-but it didn't change the fact that Nana was in a box, going into the ground.
Cedric stood ten feet away. He was dry. A driver in a uniform held a massive black umbrella over him. Cedric stood with his hands clasped in front of him, his face an impassive mask. He looked like a statue carved from ice.
Evangeline stepped forward as the casket settled. She pulled a single white rose from her pocket. The petals were wet with rain and her own tears.
"Goodbye, Nana," she whispered, her voice cracking. "I love you."
She tossed the rose. It landed softly on the wood with a wet thud.
Just as the priest said the final "Amen," the sound of tires crunching on gravel shattered the solemnity.
A sleek, stretched black limousine pulled up aggressively close to the burial site, its tires splashing mud onto the grass. The engine hummed with an arrogant power before cutting off.
Evangeline wiped the rain from her eyes, squinting. Every muscle in her body tensed.
The rear door opened. A pair of stiletto heels stepped into the mud, followed by legs that were far too exposed for a funeral.
Chloie Serrano emerged.
She was wearing black, technically. But the dress was tight, lace-paneled, and cut low in the front. She wore a fascinator hat with a small veil that did nothing to hide her perfectly made-up face.
Evangeline's hands clenched into fists at her sides. Her nails dug into her palms so hard she felt the skin break.
Chloie walked towards the grave, stepping carefully to avoid sinking into the mud. She held a lace handkerchief to her eyes, dabbing at tears that weren't there. She looked like a tragic heroine from a bad movie.
Cedric moved.
He didn't move to block her. He didn't move to tell her to leave. He stepped away from his driver, took the umbrella, and walked to meet her. He offered Chloie his arm, shielding her from the rain, leaving himself partially exposed.
The betrayal was visceral. It felt like a knife twisting in Evangeline's gut.
Evangeline intercepted them before they could reach the grave. She stepped directly into their path, mud splashing over her ankles.
"Get out," Evangeline said. Her voice was low, shaking with a rage she could no longer contain.
Chloie gasped theatrically, leaning her weight against Cedric. She looked up at him with wide, fearful eyes. "Cedric, I just wanted to pay my respects."
"You killed her," Evangeline accused, stepping closer. "You were there. You stressed her out. Her heart couldn't take it, and you knew that!"
"Evangeline!" Cedric's voice was a sharp bark. He stepped between the two women, using his body as a shield for Chloie. "Stop this. Now."
"She was in the room, Cedric! I smelled her perfume!"
"I... I did visit," Chloie sobbed, burying her face in Cedric's shoulder. "I went to bring her a gift basket. I wanted to make peace for your sake, Cedric. But she was sleeping, so I left it with the nurse and walked out. I didn't do anything!"
"Liar!" Evangeline screamed. She raised her hand, blind instinct taking over, wanting to wipe that fake sorrow off Chloie's face.
Her hand never connected.
Cedric caught her wrist in mid-air. His grip was iron-hard, his fingers digging into her delicate bones. His skin was cold.
He looked down at her, and the disappointment in his eyes was worse than hatred. It was a look reserved for a misbehaving child or a madwoman.
"You are embarrassing yourself," Cedric hissed, his voice low and dangerous. "You are embarrassing the Malone family name. Pull yourself together, or go wait in the car."
Evangeline stared at him. The man she had loved. The man she had tried so hard to please. He was holding her wrist to protect the woman who had tormented her. He cared more about the family name than the fact that his wife was burying her only relative.
"Let go of me," Evangeline whispered.
Cedric released her wrist with a shove, as if touching her was distasteful. Evangeline stumbled back, her heels slipping in the mud. She almost fell, catching her balance at the last second.
The few other mourners-distant relatives, old neighbors-were whispering. They looked at Evangeline with pity and judgment. The unstable wife. The jealous woman making a scene at a funeral.
Chloie peeked out from behind Cedric's shoulder. For a split second, when Cedric turned to glare at the priest to continue, Chloie's lips curled up. A small, subtle smile. A victory lap.
She placed a bouquet of expensive lilies on the grave, right over Evangeline's single rose, crushing it.
Two hours later, the rain had stopped, leaving the world grey and damp. Evangeline stood in the parking lot of the cemetery, leaning against the hood of a police cruiser.
Detective Miller sighed, closing his notebook with a snap. He looked tired.
"Mrs. Malone, I understand you're grieving," he said, his tone patronizingly gentle. "But the autopsy was clear. Cardiac arrest due to advanced age and underlying heart condition. Natural causes."
"It wasn't natural," Evangeline insisted, her arms crossed tightly over her chest to stop the shivering. "Stress can induce a heart attack. If Chloie Serrano went in there and threatened her..."
"Stress isn't a murder weapon in the eyes of the law, ma'am. Unless you have video of her physically attacking your grandmother, there is no crime here."
"Then check the cameras!" Evangeline demanded. "The hospital has security."
"We checked," Miller said, looking away. "The system suffered a power surge yesterday. Wiped the local drive and corrupted the cloud backup for that entire wing. From 12:00 PM to 8:00 PM. Bad timing."
Evangeline felt the blood drain from her face. Bad timing. Or expensive timing. The kind of coincidence that money could buy.
She looked across the parking lot. Cedric was standing by the open door of his limousine. Chloie was sitting inside, but the door was open. Cedric was handing her a fresh handkerchief, leaning in to say something that looked soft. Tender.
He had never looked at Evangeline like that. Not once in three years.
"So that's it?" Evangeline asked the detective. "She gets away with it because the cameras were conveniently wiped?"
"There's no 'it' to get away with, Mrs. Malone. Go home. Get some rest."
The detective got into his car and drove away.
Evangeline stood alone in the mud. She looked at her hands. They were dirty, trembling, and empty.
She looked at her left hand. The diamond wedding band glinted in the dull light. It felt heavy. It felt like a shackle.
She had tried to be the perfect wife. She had tried to be invisible, supportive, grateful. And it had gotten her nothing but a dead grandmother and a husband who protected her enemy.
The sadness that had been drowning her began to recede, replaced by a cold, hard resolve. It settled in her chest like a stone.
If the law wouldn't help her, if Cedric wouldn't protect her, she had to do it herself.
Evangeline gripped the ring. With a sharp tug, she slid it off her finger. The skin underneath was pale, marked by the years of wearing it.
She shoved the ring into her pocket.
She walked to her own car, her head high. She wasn't Mrs. Malone anymore. She was just Evangeline. And she was going to war.
The guest room at the Malone Estate was sterile. It lacked the personal touches of the master bedroom, which Evangeline had been silently banished from months ago. The walls were a neutral beige, the furniture unoffensive and cold.
Evangeline zipped up the small carry-on suitcase. She hadn't packed much. Just jeans, a few sweaters, her sketchpad. She didn't want the clothes Cedric had bought her. She didn't want anything that felt like payment for her silence.
The television in the corner was on, the volume low, providing a murmur of background noise to keep the silence from screaming at her.
"Breaking news in the business world," the anchor's voice cut through her thoughts.
Evangeline glanced up. Her breath hitched.
On the screen was a photo of Cedric and Chloie. It was an old photo from a gala last year, but they looked like a power couple. Cedric in a tuxedo, Chloie in gold, smiling radiantly.
The headline banner read: MALONE & SERRANO: A ROYAL UNION IMMINENT?
Evangeline dropped the shirt she was holding. She grabbed the remote and turned up the volume.
"...sources close to the Malone family suggest that an engagement announcement is expected within the week," the reporter chirped excitedly. "When asked for comment, Ms. Serrano's representative gave a coy 'no comment,' fueling the rumors. This merger of families would create a dynasty..."
Evangeline stared at the screen. Her husband. Her husband was rumored to be engaged to another woman, and he hadn't even bothered to deny it. The "no comment" was a confirmation. Everyone in their circle knew that.
She felt a wave of nausea, but it was quickly burned away by a flare of pure, white-hot anger.
She grabbed her phone and dialed.
"Mr. Blackwood," she said the moment the line connected. Her voice was icy, devoid of the tremors that had plagued her for days.
"Mrs. Malone? I wasn't expecting..."
"Draft the papers. Finalize them. Now."
"The... divorce papers?" The lawyer sounded hesitant. "Mrs. Malone, the prenuptial agreement is very strict. If we rush this, you might lose your claim to the spousal support and the..."
"I don't want his money," Evangeline cut him off. "I don't want his alimony. I want out. Send the file to my phone. I'm printing it myself."
"But ma'am, the NDA..."
"Just do it!"
She hung up and threw the phone onto the bed. She looked at herself in the full-length mirror. She looked tired. Pale. Her eyes were red-rimmed from crying. She looked like a victim. She looked like exactly what they thought she was: a pathetic, discarded foster kid who should be grateful for the scraps.
"No," she whispered.
She wasn't going to leave like a ghost in the night. She wasn't going to fade away while they toasted to their future on her grandmother's grave.
She walked to the back of the closet. There was a garment bag there, pushed to the very back, hidden behind winter coats. She unzipped it.
Inside was a dress she had designed herself. She had made it late at night, in the studio Cedric rarely visited. It was blood-red silk. A deep, violent crimson. It was backless, with a plunging neckline and a slit that went up to her thigh. It was a dress meant for a woman who wasn't afraid to burn the world down.
She stripped off her comfortable travel clothes. The silk felt cool and slippery against her skin as she pulled it on. It hugged every curve, fitting her like a second skin.
She sat at the vanity. She didn't use the soft pinks and nudes Cedric preferred. She grabbed the darkest, boldest red lipstick she owned. She applied it with precision, masking her grief with war paint. She lined her eyes with sharp, black wings.
She checked the "Find My" app on the iPad linked to the house account. Cedric's dot was pulsing in Midtown.
The Vanguard Club. Of course. It was where he did business. It was where he went to be seen.
Her phone pinged. The email from Blackwood. A single sentence was in the body: As per your instructions from last month, the contingency file is attached. She had asked him to prepare this weeks ago, a small act of self-preservation she never thought she'd need. Dissolution of Marriage.pdf.
She printed it on the wireless printer in the study, the machine whirring rhythmically. She didn't staple the pages. She slid them into a sleek blue folder.
She grabbed a black clutch, shoved the folder inside, and took the keys to her old sedan.
The drive to the club was a blur of red lights and adrenaline. Her knuckles were white on the steering wheel.
When she arrived at the Vanguard Club, the valet looked at her battered Honda with disdain. He hesitated to open the door.
Evangeline kicked the door open herself. She stepped out, the red dress catching the streetlights like liquid fire. She tossed the keys at the stunned valet.
"Park it. Don't scratch it," she commanded. Her voice held a steeliness he hadn't expected. He caught the keys, muttering a "Yes, ma'am."
She walked to the entrance. The bouncer, a massive man with a clipboard, stepped in front of her.
"Members only, miss. Or guest list." He looked her up and down, clearly assuming she was high-end entertainment, not a member.
"I'm Mrs. Malone," Evangeline said, lifting her chin.
The bouncer sneered. "Cedric Malone is unmarried. Nice try, sweetheart."
Evangeline didn't argue. She didn't plead. She reached into her clutch and pulled out the Black Card-the supplementary American Express Centurion Cedric had given her for 'household emergencies.'
She swiped it at the card reader on the podium before the bouncer could stop her.
The machine beeped loudly. A green light flashed. AUTHORIZED: C. MALONE.
The bouncer's sneer vanished. He looked at the screen, then at her. He stepped back, unhooking the velvet rope.
"My apologies, Mrs. Malone."
Evangeline walked past him without a glance. The heavy oak doors swung open.
The club was dimly lit, smelling of expensive scotch and cigars. Jazz music played softly, creating a sophisticated hum. Laughter rang out from the VIP section on the mezzanine.
Evangeline climbed the stairs, her heels clicking loudly on the marble steps. Click. Click. Click. Like a countdown.
She reached the top. She scanned the room.
There he was.
Cedric was sitting in a plush leather booth, surrounded by a group of sycophants in suits. And right next to him, sitting closer than appropriate, was Chloie.
Chloie was laughing at something Cedric had said, her hand resting possessively on his forearm. She looked like the lady of the manor. She looked happy.
Cedric looked bored. He was swirling his drink, his gaze unfocused. Until he looked up.
His eyes locked onto the figure in red standing at the edge of the lounge.
His eyes widened. Shock, genuine and unguarded, flashed across his face. He didn't recognize her for a split second. The confident, dangerous woman in the blood-red dress didn't match the image of the meek wife he had left at home.
The room went quiet as she approached. The conversation at the table died.
Evangeline didn't stop until she was standing right in front of their table, casting a long shadow over Chloie. She smiled, but it didn't reach her eyes. It was a smile made of razor blades.