
From Abused Wife to Tycoon
Chapter 2
The morning light filtered through the unfamiliar windows of my pre-marital apartment, casting long shadows across the hardwood floors I hadn't walked on in eight years. Every step sent a dull ache through my bruised ribs, a constant reminder of how quickly my world had shattered.
I'd moved in quietly three days ago while Luca believed I was still at the hospital. The doctors had kept me for observation after the bleeding, and thankfully, our baby had survived the trauma. But I couldn't—wouldn't—return to that house, to him.
Sitting at my old kitchen table, I spread out the documents I'd been collecting over the past months. Bank statements, expense reports, invoices that didn't quite add up. As the company's top sales performer, I'd noticed discrepancies in our financial records—small at first, then increasingly bold. Luca had always handled the books personally, claiming it was more efficient that way.
Now I understood why.
My phone buzzed with another missed call from him. Seventeen so far today. I'd documented each one, just as I'd photographed my bruises and saved the hospital records. Dr. Hayes had been thorough in her documentation, noting the "blunt force trauma consistent with domestic violence" in my medical file.
A sharp knock at my door made me freeze. Then came his voice, muffled but unmistakably furious.
"Nina! I know you're in there. Open the door."
I gathered the papers quickly, sliding them into a folder before approaching the door. Through the peephole, I could see Luca pacing, his usually perfect hair disheveled, his tie askew.
"We need to talk," he called out when I didn't respond.
I opened the door but kept the chain latched. "There's nothing to discuss."
His eyes were bloodshot, whether from anger or alcohol, I couldn't tell. "This is ridiculous, Nina. You're my wife. You belong at home."
"Your home. Not mine." I kept my voice steady despite the tremor in my hands. "I'm filing for divorce."
"Like hell you are." He pressed closer to the door, and I caught the familiar scent of his expensive cologne mixed with something sharper—desperation. "You think you can just walk away? Destroy everything we built?"
"You destroyed it the moment you chose her over me."
His laugh was bitter. "Her? This is about Lillian? Nina, she's nothing—"
"Nothing?" The word escaped before I could stop it. "Then why did you humiliate me for her? Why did you give her my award?"
For a moment, something flickered across his face—guilt, maybe, or regret. But it vanished as quickly as it appeared.
"You're being dramatic. Come home, and we'll work this out."
"No." I started to close the door, but his hand shot out, pressing against it.
"You can't survive without me, Nina. Without the company, you have nothing. I'll make sure of that."
The threat hung in the air between us like poison. Before I could respond, his phone rang. He glanced at the screen, and his entire demeanor shifted.
"I have to take this," he said, stepping back from the door.
I watched through the crack as he answered, his voice immediately softening to a tone I hadn't heard in months.
"Hey, baby. No, no, don't worry about that. I'm handling it." He ran his free hand through his hair, a gesture I'd once found endearing. "She's just being difficult, but she'll come around. She always does."
My stomach clenched as he continued, his back turned to my door.
"Of course I love you. This whole thing with Nina—it's just business now. Once the divorce is final, we can be together properly." His voice dropped to an intimate whisper. "I promise, Lillian. You're the only one who matters."
The words cut deeper than his slap had. Eight years of marriage, reduced to "just business." I was nothing more than an obstacle to his happiness with another woman.
When he finished the call and turned back to my door, I'd already closed it, sliding the deadbolt home with shaking fingers.
"Nina!" He pounded on the door. "We're not done talking!"
I sank against the wall, one hand protectively covering my belly. "Yes, we are," I whispered.
The next morning, I sat in Dr. Hayes' office for my follow-up appointment, the routine prenatal checkup feeling surreal after everything that had happened. The baby's heartbeat filled the room—strong, steady, defiant.
"Everything looks good," Dr. Hayes said, her kind eyes filled with concern. "But I'm worried about you, Nina. Stress isn't good for either of you."
"I'm handling it," I lied.
When I returned to my apartment two hours later, my phone was buzzing with notifications. Missed calls from my bank, my financial advisor, even my insurance company.
With growing dread, I opened my banking app. Account frozen. I tried my investment portfolio. Access denied. My company credit cards—all canceled.
Luca had made good on his threat. With surgical precision, he'd cut off every financial lifeline I had, leaving me with nothing but the cash in my wallet and the roof over my head.
I stared at the screen, my hands trembling with a mixture of fear and rage. He thought he'd trapped me, forced me into dependence.
He had no idea what he'd just unleashed.
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