He sl:apped me so hard my lip bl:ed, just because I asked where he was last night. At dawn, I quietly cooked a massive Southern feast and laid out the silver cutlery. “That’s a good wife,” — Part 2
My lip pulsed every time I smiled.
At six-thirty, Marcus came downstairs in a navy robe, freshly showered, smug enough to poison the air. Celeste followed behind him, diamonds at her throat though the sun had barely come up.
Marcus stopped at the dining-room entrance. His eyes widened at the spread.
“Well,” he said, pulling out the chair at the head of the table. “That’s a good wife.”
Celeste gave a pleased hum. “See? Discipline improves a household.”
I placed the silver cutlery down one piece at a time. The set had belonged to my grandmother. Marcus had once tried to sell it to cover a poker debt. He had told the buyer I was sentimental, weak, easy to manage.
“Sit,” I said.
He blinked. “Excuse me?”
“Food’s getting cold.”
His smile sharpened. “Careful, Lena.”
I poured his coffee. “Cream, no sugar. Like always.”
He leaned back, victorious. “Maybe there’s hope for you yet.”
His phone buzzed beside his plate. He ignored it. Then it buzzed again. And again. Celeste frowned.
“Popular this morning?” I asked.
Marcus glanced at the screen. For the first time, his face changed color.
Unknown number.
Then another.
Then his lawyer.
Then his bank.
He looked up slowly. “What did you do?”
I buttered a biscuit. “I cooked.”
The front gate intercom rang once. Marcus went rigid.
Before he could move, the house speakers clicked on. His own voice filled the room, lazy and drunk.
“Lena signs whatever I put in front of her. She doesn’t read contracts. She reads recipe books.”
Celeste dropped her fork.
Another voice followed. A woman laughing. Then Marcus again.
“Once her board votes her out, the company’s mine. Her brothers won’t touch me. They’re criminals. I’ll bury them with one phone call.”
Marcus jumped to his feet. “Turn it off.”
I did not move.
Because that recording had already been sent to my board, his attorney, three federal investigators, and the district attorney my second brother had put through law school years before Marcus ever knew my last name.
The kitchen doors swung open.
Rafael stepped out first, broad-shouldered in a charcoal suit, wiping his hands with one of my pristine white napkins.
Then Dante, calm and smiling, his gold watch flashing.
Then Nico, the youngest of my older brothers, carrying a sealed evidence box like a present.
Marcus stumbled backward.
The city called them syndicate captains. They called themselves logistics men. They owned docks, unions, clubs, debts, secrets.
But today, their true weapon was paperwork.
Rafael tossed the napkin onto Marcus’s empty plate.
“Morning, brother-in-law,” he said. “Hope you’re hungry.”
Part 3
Marcus pointed at them, trying to summon the voice that had frightened waiters, clerks, and me.
“You can’t come into my house.”
Dante laughed softly. “Your house?”
Nico opened the evidence box and laid the first folder beside the biscuits. Bank transfers. Forged signatures. Photographs. Emails. A copy of the prenup Marcus had mocked because he had never bothered to read paragraph fourteen.