
My Husband Threatened My Dying Grandmother to Protect His Mistress
Chapter 5
The sky above the cemetery was a bruised purple, heavy with unshed rain that matched the pressure building behind my eyes. I held the alabaster urn against my chest like a shield, the ceramic cool against my feverish skin. It was all that was left of Eleanor—five pounds of ash and bone fragments inside a vessel that felt far too light to contain a lifetime of love.
We stood by the open columbarium niche. Kingston was checking his phone, the blue light reflecting in his impatient eyes. Brielle stood beside him, draped in a black coat that cost more than Eleanor’s entire funeral, her hand resting protectively over her bump. She looked bored.
"Let's wrap this up," Kingston muttered, sliding his phone into his pocket. "It's going to pour, and I have a dinner meeting at seven."
"Just a moment," I whispered, my voice hoarse. "I haven't said goodbye."
I took a step toward the niche, my grip on the urn tightening.
"Oh, for heaven's sake," Brielle sighed. She moved suddenly, stepping into my path. "You've been crying for days, Mira. It's morbid."
She feigned a stumble—a clumsy, theatrical lurch to the left. Her shoulder checked mine with surprising force. My heels sank into the soft earth, balance failing. My hands flew out instinctively to break my fall.
The urn slipped.
Time seemed to fracture. I saw the white ceramic tumbling end over end, a slow-motion catastrophe. It hit the pavement with a sound like a gunshot—a sharp, final *crack*.
Grey dust exploded outward, billowing into a pale cloud before settling into the mud and gravel.
"No!" The scream tore from my throat, raw and animalistic. I dropped to my knees, my hands plunging into the dirt, trying to scoop up the grey powder, trying to put her back together. "Grandmother! No, no, no..."
"Oops," Brielle said from above me. Her voice was devoid of shock. "Clumsy me. Those heels really are treacherous on grass."
I looked up. She was smiling—a small, satisfied curve of her lips that didn't reach her eyes.
Something inside me snapped. The grief that had been drowning me suddenly boiled into a rage so pure it felt like fire. I lunged, my ash-covered hands reaching for the hem of her coat.
"You monster!" I shrieked.
Kingston didn't hesitate. He snapped his fingers. Two burly security guards, men who used to open doors for me, moved with terrifying speed. One grabbed my left arm, the other my right, wrenching them behind my back until my shoulders burned.
They forced me down, face inches from the shattered remains of my grandmother.
"Control yourself!" Kingston barked, stepping between me and Brielle. "You are assaulting a pregnant woman!"
"She did it on purpose!" I screamed, struggling against the guards' iron grip. "She threw her! She threw Eleanor into the dirt!"
Brielle dusted off her coat, looking down at me with disdain. "She was just an old woman, Mira. Dead is dead. Stop being hysterical. It's embarrassing."
She looked at the guards, her eyes glinting with malice. "Make her clean up her mess. We can't leave trash on the walkway."
"Get on your knees," one guard grunted, shoving my head down.
The humiliation was a physical weight. I was kneeling in the mud, surrounded by the scattered ashes of the only person who had ever loved me, while the man I once adored checked his watch. Beyond the cemetery gates, I saw the flash of camera lenses. The paparazzi. Brielle had called them.
*Click. Click. Click.* Documenting the final destruction of Mira Kennedy.
Then, the low rumble of an engine cut through the air.
It wasn't a standard town car. It was the deep, aggressive growl of a predator. A motorcade of four black SUVs tore up the gravel drive, tires crunching violently as they screeched to a halt just yards away.
The doors flew open. Men in tactical suits poured out, moving with a disciplined lethality that made Kingston’s rented bodyguards look like amateurs. In seconds, Kingston’s men were disarmed, their arms twisted behind their backs, faces pressed into the hood of their own car.
Silence fell over the cemetery, heavy and sudden.
From the lead vehicle, a man emerged. He was tall, his silhouette sharp against the grey sky. He wore a suit that fit like armor, and he moved with a terrifying, contained power.
Hendrix Wallace.
He didn't look at Kingston. He didn't look at the guards. His dark eyes were locked on me. He walked straight into the mud, ruining Italian leather shoes without a second thought, and dropped to one knee beside me.
"Mira," he said softly.
He unbuttoned his jacket and draped it over my trembling shoulders. The warmth was instant, smelling of cedar and rain. He pulled a silk handkerchief from his pocket and gently, reverently, wiped the ash from my hands.
"Who the hell are you?" Kingston sputtered, stepping forward, trying to regain control. "This is a private—"
Hendrix stood up slowly. He turned to Kingston, and the air temperature seemed to drop ten degrees. The look in Hendrix's eyes wasn't anger; it was a promise of annihilation.
"You've made your last mistake, Hayes," Hendrix said. His voice was low, vibrating in my chest.
He turned back to me, ignoring Kingston’s blustering outrage. He reached into his pocket and pulled out a small velvet box. When he opened it, I gasped.
It wasn't a diamond. It was a ring fashioned from gold, with a small, intricate locket embedded in the setting—a replica of the one I had given a starving boy twenty years ago.
"I can't offer you peace, Mira," Hendrix said, his eyes searching mine, intense and unyielding. "Not yet. But I can offer you a sword."
He held the ring out, the gold catching the scant light.
"Marry me," he commanded, though it sounded like a prayer. "Let me burn their world down for you."
I looked at Kingston, his face pale with confusion and fear. I looked at the shattered urn in the mud. I touched the scar on my chest, the one Kingston called damaged goods. The sadness in my heart calcified into something harder. Something useful.
I held out my hand.
"Yes," I whispered.
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