After months away on duty, I came home expecting my wife’s embrace, but she flinched from my touch like I was a stranger. One night I lifted the blanket, searching for proof she had betrayed me, and froze at the bruises covering her body. — Part 2

I gently pulled the blanket back over Elena’s shoulders and kissed her forehead.

“Then they didn’t steal from my wife,” I said quietly. “They declared war on the wrong man.”

Part 2

I did not rush downstairs.

Advertisement

I did not swing at Ricardo, even though every part of me wanted to.

I stayed beside Elena until her trembling eased. Then I asked one question.

Advertisement

“Do you trust me?”

She looked at me as if trusting anyone hurt. “I tried to call you.”

“I know.”

“They said if I disturbed your mission, you would lose everything. Then they told me if I refused to sign, they would accuse me of fraud. Your mother said no one would believe a lonely wife over family.”

Advertisement

My mother had always been graceful in public and cruel in private, but I had mistaken her poison for ambition. Ricardo had mistaken my restraint for weakness.

At dawn, I made three calls.

The first was to Lieutenant Harris, my commanding officer and the only person who understood why my last deployment had not been ordinary patrol duty.

The second was to Grace Lin, a federal prosecutor I had once helped during a joint military financial crimes case.

The third was to Dr. Patel, a forensic physician who documented Elena’s injuries before they could disappear.

By breakfast, I was calm enough to sit across from my mother.

She poured coffee into my cup as if the house belonged to her. “Elena seems fragile. Perhaps you should think about having her evaluated.”

Ricardo smirked. “Or divorced. I know attorneys.”

Elena sat beside me in silence, her hand hidden in mine beneath the table.

I smiled. “How thoughtful.”

Ricardo leaned back in his chair. “While you were off playing hero, we kept everything together here. The company needed leadership. Mother needed security. Elena needed guidance.”

“Guidance?” I repeated.

Mother’s eyes hardened. “Don’t be dramatic. She signed willingly.”

“Did she?”

Ricardo tapped his fingers on the table. “Careful, brother. You’ve been gone a long time. The papers are legal.”

That was their first mistake.

They believed paper meant power.

Their second mistake was planning a family dinner that Friday to “celebrate the restructuring.” They invited investors, lawyers, cousins, and my father’s old business partners. Mother wanted applause. Ricardo wanted witnesses for his victory.

So I helped them prepare.

I ordered the wine.

I confirmed the guest list.

I even stood quietly while Ricardo showed my study to guests as his “new office.”

“You’re much calmer than I expected,” he said, pouring my whiskey into my glass.

“I learned patience in places where panic gets people killed.”

He laughed, missing the warning entirely.

On Friday morning, Grace called.

“The forged signatures are enough to freeze the transfers,” she said. “The medical report supports coercion. And the shell company?”

“What about it?”

“It connects to three offshore accounts. Ricardo has been moving money for years.”

I looked through the glass doors and saw my mother ordering Elena to rearrange flowers with shaking hands.

“Good,” I said. “Bring everything tonight.”

Grace paused. “Alejandro, are you sure you want this to happen in public?”

I watched Ricardo put my medal against his chest as a joke and salute himself in the mirror.

“Yes,” I said. “They wanted an audience. Give them one.”

Part 3

Continue to Part 3 Part 2 of 3
myquotestory.com

myquotestory.com

1243 articles published