
After My Husband Made Me the Villain in His Game
Chapter 4
The pawn shop receipt burned a hole in my pocket, a flimsy slip of paper in exchange for the diamond earrings Theodore had given me five years ago. They were the only things Veda hadn't smashed, and now they were converted into a retainer for a divorce attorney who smelled of cheap tobacco and desperation.
I walked into the study, the manila envelope heavy in my good hand. Theodore was pacing, muttering about server latency.
"Sign it," I said, tossing the papers onto his desk. They slid across the mahogany, coming to rest beside his multiple monitors.
Theodore blinked, dragging his eyes away from the screen. He picked up the document, scanning the bold legal font. A smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth—not the warm smile I used to live for, but a cruel, patronizing twist of lips.
"Divorce?" He chuckled, a dry, rattling sound. "Mallory, you can't even open a jar of pickles without me. You have no money, no hair, and a broken arm. Where would you go? The shelter?"
"I'd rather sleep in a gutter than stay here with you and your delusions," I said, my voice steady despite the trembling in my knees.
"It's a tantrum event," he dismissed, tearing the papers in half. Then again. And again. The sound of ripping paper was violent in the quiet room. He let the confetti rain down onto the carpet. "You're not leaving. We have the Charity Gala tonight. Veda says appearance is mandatory for the 'Power Couple' achievement. Go put on a wig."
He turned back to his screens. I stood there, staring at the shredded remains of my freedom, and realized that ink and paper wouldn't save me. I had to save myself.
***
The gala was a suffocating kaleidoscope of camera flashes and forced smiles. Theodore gripped my fractured arm with bruising force, parading me around like a broken doll. He whispered instructions in my ear—"Smile," "Don't slouch," "Look adoring"—while checking his phone for Veda's next command.
When he turned to charm a senator, distracted by the vibration of a new 'quest' notification, I saw my opening. I didn't walk; I vanished. I slipped through the heavy velvet curtains of the ballroom and out the service exit.
The city rain was freezing, a sudden shock against my bare shoulders. I didn't care. I kicked off my heels and ran barefoot down the slick pavement, the jagged ends of my hair plastered to my skull. I ran until my lungs burned and the lights of the gala were just a blur in the rearview mirror of my mind.
A black sedan slowed beside me, its engine purring like a predatory cat. Panic seized my throat. Had Theodore sent security?
The rear window rolled down. It wasn't a guard. It was a face etched with quiet intensity and a jawline I remembered from a hospital room two years ago.
"Get in, Mallory," Beau Ross said. His voice wasn't a command; it was an anchor.
I hesitated, shivering violently. "I have nowhere to go. He froze my accounts. He tore up the papers."
Beau opened the door and stepped out into the downpour, ruining a suit that cost more than my car. He held an umbrella over me, shielding me from the storm. "I know. I've been watching. I have a safe house. And I have a job offer, if you're ready to stop being a victim."
I looked at him—really looked at him. There was no madness in his eyes, no game. Just patience. I stepped into the car.
***
Three days later, the woman in the mirror was a stranger. The stylist Beau hired hadn't tried to hide the damage Theodore had done; she had transformed it. My hair was now a sleek, sharp pixie cut that accented the hollows of my cheekbones and the new hardness in my eyes. I wore a tailored charcoal suit that armored me against the world.
"Ross Investments is facing a deadlock with the Kinsley Group," Beau said, handing me a tablet as we walked into his firm's glass-walled conference room. "Theodore tried to close them last week. He failed because he pitched them on aggressive expansion. He didn't do his homework."
I scanned the file. "Kinsley is risk-averse. They care about legacy, not growth."
"Exactly," Beau said, opening the door for me. "Show them what Hayes Corporation lost."
The boardroom fell silent as I entered. I saw the skepticism in the eyes of the Kinsley executives—they saw a cast-off wife, a scandal in the tabloids. I didn't flinch. I sat at the head of the table, not as Theodore's shadow, but as Mallory Grant.
"Gentlemen," I began, my voice clear and resonant. "You rejected the previous offer because it threatened your family's hundred-year history. I'm not here to sell you a future you don't want. I'm here to protect the past you've built."
For the next hour, I dissected the deal with surgical precision. I wove a narrative of stability and heritage that Theodore, blinded by his obsession with 'leveling up,' could never comprehend. I saw the shift in the room—the skepticism melting into respect.
When Mr. Kinsley signed the contract, he looked me in the eye. "Theodore Hayes is a fool, Ms. Grant."
I capped my pen, the click echoing like a gunshot. "Theodore Hayes doesn't exist anymore," I said, a ghost of a smile touching my lips. "He's just a character in a game he's already lost."
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