
The Contract Wife's Silent Revenge
Chapter 3
The first night I slept in the Frank estate, I barely slept at all.
The room was too quiet, thick with the kind of silence money buys, where even the walls felt trained not to speak. The bed was massive, dressed in silk sheets that smelled faintly of lavender and something colder. I lay on my back, staring at the ceiling, listening to a house that never truly rested.
At dawn, I rose.
Not because I was rested, but because waiting had never saved anyone.
I dressed simply: a cream blouse, a fitted black skirt, my hair pulled back tight. No jewelry. No softness. If this house was a battlefield, I wouldn’t walk into it unarmed by clarity.
A soft knock sounded at the door.
When I opened it, a middle-aged woman stood there, posture stiff, eyes wary.
“Mrs. Frank,” she said carefully. “Breakfast is served. Madam Clara requests your presence.”
Of course she did.
I followed the maid through endless corridors. polished marble, tall mirrors, paintings that cost more than my childhood home. Every step reminded me that this place wasn’t built to shelter people. It was built to display power.
Clara Frank waited in the dining room, seated at the head of a long table like a queen at court. She wore a tailored gray suit, hair sleek, eyes sharp and calculating. A tablet lay beside her plate. She didn’t look up when I entered.
“Sit,” she said.
I did.
She finally lifted her gaze, scanning me slowly, deliberately, as if she were appraising a product she’d purchased under protest.
“You will address me as Madam,” she said. “You will not interfere in Frank Oil & Gas affairs. You will not embarrass my son. And you will not pretend this marriage grants you influence.”
Her voice was calm. Deadly.
I nodded once. “Understood.”
She narrowed her eyes slightly. “I don’t care whether you’re happy. I care whether you’re useful.”
“I’ve always been useful,” I replied.
A faint smile touched her lips. Not warmth. Approval.
“Good. Then we won’t have problems.”
She pushed a folder across the table.
Inside were documents, non-disclosure agreements, behavioral clauses, penalties outlined in cold legal language. My father’s company name appeared more than once.
A leash.
“You’ll sign these,” Clara said. “And in return, your father’s business will receive temporary relief.”
Temporary.
That word lodged in my chest.
“I’ll review them,” I said calmly.
Clara’s gaze sharpened. “You’ll sign them.”
“I will,” I corrected, “after I read them.”
Silence stretched.
Finally, she nodded. “You have until tonight.”
I stood. “Thank you for breakfast, Madam.”
Her eyes followed me as I left.
Good.
Let her watch.
---
I spent the morning learning the house.
I noted which corridors were monitored by cameras and which weren’t. Which staff avoided certain wings. Which doors required codes instead of keys.
The west wing was quiet.
Too quiet.
A maid I’d passed twice stiffened when I approached it.
“Is something wrong?” I asked gently.
“That area is… private,” she said quickly. “Guests aren’t allowed.”
“I’m family,” I replied with a small smile.
She didn’t smile back.
The further I walked, the colder the air became. The decor shifted, less warmth, more steel. Offices replaced bedrooms. A faint hum vibrated beneath the floor.
Data rooms.
Security.
I was turning back when a door at the end of the corridor caught my eye. Unlike the others, it was old. Wooden. Out of place.
I tried the handle.
Locked.
But something about it felt wrong like a scar someone had tried to decorate over.
That night, Jeffrey found me in the main living room, reading one of the documents Clara had given me.
“You look busy,” he said, pouring himself a drink.
“I am.”
He smirked. “Already trying to climb?”
“I’m trying not to drown.”
He studied me for a moment. “You won’t last long if you push my mother.”
“I don’t plan to push her,” I said. “I plan to outlast her.”
That made him laugh.
“Careful, Letty,” he said. “This house eats people.”
I met his gaze. “Then it picked the wrong meal.”
Later, when the house slept, I returned to the west wing.
The old door stared back at me in the dark.
I slid a thin pin from my hair and worked the lock slowly, quietly, something my mother had taught me years ago, laughing like it was a game.
The lock clicked open.
Inside was a small archive room, dusty shelves, outdated hard drives, paper files yellowed with age.
I didn’t touch anything.
Not yet.
Because on the far wall, framed and half-hidden behind a cabinet, was a photograph.
My mother.
Standing beside Clara Frank.
Smiling.
My breath left my body.
Whatever had destroyed my family hadn’t been an accident.
And this marriage wasn’t the beginning.
It was the continuation of a war that had started long before I said “I do.”
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