
After My Ex-Husband Lost Everything, I Took His Home
Chapter 1
The crystal flutes chimed against one another, a delicate, fragile sound that grated against my ears like grinding teeth. I stood in the shadows of the ballroom’s mezzanine, looking down at the celebration of my own erasure. The Grand Seattle Hotel had outdone itself—white roses cascading from the ceiling, enough champagne to drown a navy, and at the center of it all, my ex-husband, Mark Howell, clutching the waist of a woman who looked like a discount version of who I used to be.
Audrey Baker. She was draped in a sequined gown that caught the light with desperate eagerness, flashing a diamond ring that I knew, for a fact, had been purchased with the last liquid assets of Howell Industries. Mark looked handsome in his tuxedo, though I could spot the tell-tale loosening of his tie, the nervous sweat he dabbed from his brow. He was a man standing on a trapdoor, toasting to the solid ground he thought was beneath him.
"To the future!" Mark announced, his voice booming with a confidence he didn't possess. "To a partner who truly understands me."
Applause rippled through the room, polite and hollow.
Near the buffet, holding court like a queen in exile, was my former mother-in-law, Diana Owens. She swirled her drink, her lips peeling back in a sneer as she addressed a circle of Seattle’s elite. I didn't need to be close to read her lips, but the acoustics carried her shrill voice perfectly to my hiding spot.
"Oh, Mark is finally free," Diana declared, loud enough to ensure half the room heard. "You have no idea the burden of living with a cripple. That mute girl… she was like a ghost haunting the house. Useless. Mark deserves a woman who can actually speak his name."
The socialites tittered, covering their mouths with manicured hands. My hand drifted to my throat, tracing the faint, silver line of the scar hidden beneath the high collar of my obsidian silk gown. For three years, that silence had been my prison. Tonight, it was my weapon.
I signaled the waitstaff near the main doors. It was time.
The heavy mahogany doors swung open with a theatrical groan, severing the hum of conversation. The orchestra faltered, the violinist’s bow screeching to a halt. A draft of cold night air swept into the perfumed heat of the ballroom, and I stepped into the light.
The silence that followed was absolute. It wasn't the silence of my mute years; it was the silence of predators holding their breath.
I walked down the grand staircase, my heels striking the marble with the rhythm of a ticking clock. Heads turned. Whispers ignited like dry grass. They recognized the face—the high cheekbones, the dark eyes—but they didn't recognize the posture. The Amaia they knew was a shrinking violet, a woman who communicated in scribbled notes and apologetic nods. The woman descending the stairs was a blade sheathed in couture.
Two security guards, recognizing me as the "disgraced ex," moved to intercept me at the base of the stairs. One of them, a man named Miller who had once blocked me from entering my own home, reached for my arm.
"Ma'am, you're not on the list. You need to leave before—"
I stopped. I didn't pull away. I simply turned my gaze to him, cold and unyielding.
"Remove your hand," I said.
The sound of my voice was a physical blow to the room. It was low, rich, and vibrating with an authority that froze Miller in his tracks. He snatched his hand back as if burned.
Mark dropped his champagne flute. The glass shattered, the sound echoing like a gunshot, but he didn't look down. His face drained of color, his mouth hanging open in a grotesque parody of shock. Diana clutched her pearl necklace, her eyes bulging.
"Amaia?" Mark whispered, the name strangling him.
I ignored him, sweeping past the stunned security and walking straight to the stage. Audrey looked between Mark and me, her smile faltering as she realized her sequined dress looked like a costume next to the architectural perfection of my gown.
I stepped up to the microphone. The feedback whined for a split second before I silenced it with a tap of my finger.
"Good evening," I said, my voice projecting clear and crisp to the back of the hall. "I apologize for the interruption. I hate to spoil a toast, especially one bought on credit."
Diana found her voice first. She surged forward, her face turning a mottled red. "You have some nerve! You mute little charity case! Security! Get her out! She’s trespassing!"
"I am not trespassing," I replied, my tone conversational, deadly. "And I am not here as Mark’s ex-wife. That woman died in a suburban rental you graciously provided."
I reached into my clutch and pulled out a sleek, black document folder. I tossed it onto the table in front of Mark. It slid across the linen tablecloth, knocking over a centerpiece, and came to rest against his trembling hand.
"I am here as the newly appointed Pacific Director of Howell Global Holdings," I announced, watching the blood drain from Mark's face as the name registered. Howell Global—the massive conglomerate that held the strings of his pitiful, failing company.
"Mark," I said, savoring the syllables. "Audrey. Congratulations on the engagement. Consider this my gift."
Mark opened the folder with shaking fingers. I didn't need to look to know what he saw: a Notice of Default. Immediate recall of all loans. Bankruptcy.
"Howell Global owns your debt, Mark," I said softly into the microphone, letting the intimacy of the threat sink in. "And as of tonight, I am calling it in."
The room erupted into chaos, but I only had eyes for Mark. He looked at me, really looked at me, and saw the precipice I had just pushed him off.
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