
From Abused Wife to Tycoon
Chapter 3
I stared at my frozen bank account for the hundredth time, the red "Access Denied" message burning into my retinas like a brand. Three days had passed since Luca's financial assault, and I'd been surviving on the forty-seven dollars in my wallet and the groceries already in my apartment. The baby kicked restlessly, as if sensing my anxiety.
A soft knock interrupted my spiraling thoughts. Unlike Luca's aggressive pounding, this was gentle, respectful. I peered through the peephole and saw a familiar face—Maximilian Clark, my college friend and investment advisor. His dark hair was perfectly styled despite the Seattle drizzle, and he held a brown paper bag that smelled suspiciously like my favorite Thai takeout.
"Max?" I opened the door, genuinely surprised. "What are you doing here?"
"I heard what happened," he said quietly, his warm brown eyes filled with concern. "May I come in?"
I stepped aside, suddenly self-conscious about my rumpled appearance. I hadn't bothered with makeup or proper clothes since leaving the hospital. Max had always been impeccably dressed, even in college, and today was no exception—his charcoal suit fit perfectly, his tie precisely knotted.
"I brought dinner," he said, setting the bag on my kitchen counter. "Pad Thai from that place on Pine Street you used to love."
The gesture was so thoughtful, so unlike the calculated cruelty I'd been experiencing, that tears pricked my eyes. "You didn't have to—"
"Nina." His voice was gentle but firm. "When was the last time you ate a real meal?"
I couldn't remember. The admission must have shown on my face because Max immediately began unpacking containers, his movements efficient and caring.
"Sit," he commanded softly. "We need to talk."
As I settled into my chair, Max pulled out a thick manila folder from his briefcase. His expression was serious, almost excited, in a way that made my pulse quicken.
"Do you remember the investment you made five years ago?" he asked, sliding the folder across the table. "The million dollars from your inheritance?"
I nodded slowly. After my grandmother's death, I'd given Max a million dollars to invest, wanting to secure something separate from the company accounts. Luca had been annoyed about it at the time, calling it a waste of money that could have gone into business expansion.
"I've been managing it conservatively, as you requested," Max continued, his fingers drumming against the table—a nervous habit I remembered from our study sessions. "But I also took some calculated risks with your permission. Tech startups, emerging markets, some cryptocurrency before it exploded."
My heart began to race. "Max, what are you saying?"
He opened the folder, revealing pages of financial statements and investment summaries. The numbers swam before my eyes until one figure jumped out, so large it couldn't be real.
"Two hundred million dollars," Max said quietly. "Your investment portfolio is worth two hundred million dollars, Nina."
I stared at the papers, my hands shaking. "That's... that's impossible."
"It's not only possible, it's yours. Completely separate from any marital assets. Luca has no claim to it, no knowledge of it, no access to it." Max leaned forward, his voice intense. "You're not trapped, Nina. You're free."
The room spun around me. Two hundred million dollars. Financial independence beyond my wildest dreams. The power to rebuild, to fight back, to create something entirely my own.
"Why didn't you tell me before?" I whispered.
"You were happy," he said simply. "Or I thought you were. I was waiting for the right time, maybe your anniversary or when the baby was born. I never imagined..." His jaw tightened. "I should have told you sooner."
I thought of Luca's smug confidence when he'd frozen my accounts, his certainty that he held all the cards. He'd been so wrong.
"What do I do now?" I asked, my voice stronger than it had been in days.
Max's smile was fierce, transformative. "Now? Now you show them what Nina Garcia is really capable of."
The next morning, I sat across from Margaret Chen, one of Seattle's most respected divorce attorneys, in her corner office overlooking Elliott Bay. The rain had stopped, and sunlight streamed through the windows, illuminating the legal documents spread between us.
"Your husband made a critical error," Margaret said, her silver hair pulled back in a severe bun that matched her no-nonsense demeanor. "By freezing your accounts without legal justification, he's opened himself up to significant liability."
I nodded, absorbing every word. The knowledge of my hidden wealth had transformed me overnight—my spine was straighter, my voice clearer, my mind sharp with purpose.
"I want full custody of my child," I said. "And I want to protect my assets."
"Given the documented domestic violence and his financial manipulation, custody shouldn't be an issue," Margaret assured me. "As for your assets, the investment account Max mentioned is completely separate property. Your husband can't touch it."
After the legal consultation, I met with David Park, a business consultant who specialized in startup ventures. His modern office in South Lake Union buzzed with entrepreneurial energy.
"You want to compete directly with Miller & Garcia?" David asked, his eyebrows raised. "That's ambitious."
"I built that company," I said firmly. "I know every client, every process, every weakness. And I know exactly what they're doing wrong."
David leaned back in his chair, studying me with newfound respect. "What would you call this new company?"
I thought of the past week—the destruction of my old life, the emergence of something stronger from the ashes. "Renaissance," I said without hesitation. "Renaissance Consulting."
"I like it," David grinned. "When do we start?"
As I walked back to my car, my phone buzzed with a text from Max: "How did the meetings go?"
I typed back quickly: "Game on."
For the first time in months, I felt like myself again. Luca had tried to destroy me, to reduce me to nothing. Instead, he'd freed me to become something he could never imagine—his most dangerous competitor.
You may also like





