
The Contract Wife's Silent Revenge
Chapter 5
After Jeffrey left my room, I sat on the edge of the bed for a long time, staring at the empty space where my tablet had been.
It wasn’t just a device.
It was my proof.
My leverage.
My mother’s voice clawing its way out of the grave.
And now it was in his hands.
The realization settled into my bones slowly, like poison seeping through blood. Jeffrey Frank wasn’t just a spoiled billionaire heir with a talent for cruelty. He was a gatekeeper. A man raised inside secrets so dark they had taught him how to breathe without light.
I forced myself to stand.
Panic would get me killed faster than ignorance.
I went to the bathroom, splashed cold water on my face, and stared at my reflection until my breathing steadied.
My eyes looked different now, sharper, harder. The girl who had walked into this marriage believing endurance was strength was gone.
I wrapped my hair into a neat bun and straightened my spine.
If they wanted a compliant wife, I’d give them one.
Just not the real me.
---
The next morning, the house buzzed with an unfamiliar tension.
Security was doubled. New guards lined the gates. The staff spoke even less than usual, eyes lowered, movements precise, like soldiers anticipating war.
Clara sat at the head of the breakfast table, immaculate in cream silk, reading the financial pages like nothing in the world was amiss.
Jeffrey didn’t show up.
I took my seat quietly, lifting my coffee with steady hands.
“You look well-rested,” Clara said without looking at me.
I smiled. “I sleep deeply.”
A lie.
She finally raised her eyes. They lingered on me for a moment too long, as if searching for cracks.
“Good,” she said. “You’ll need your energy today.”
“For what?”
“We have guests arriving this evening. Important ones.” She folded her newspaper. “You’ll attend. Smile. Speak only when spoken to.”
I nodded. “Of course.”
Her gaze sharpened. “And Letty?”
“Yes?”
“If you’re feeling… unsettled, I suggest you remember your position.”
I met her eyes. “I know exactly where I stand.”
That was another lie.
I didn’t stand anywhere.
I was trapped.
---
I found Jeffrey in the west wing hours later.
He was in the private gym, shirtless, fists wrapped as he pummeled a sandbag like it had personally betrayed him. Sweat ran down his spine, muscles flexing with each brutal strike.
Anger rolled off him in waves.
I stayed by the door.
“You took something from my room,” I said.
He didn’t stop punching. “Correction. I confiscated something you shouldn’t have.”
“That tablet belongs to me.”
He turned then, eyes dark, jaw tight. “Nothing belongs to you in this house.”
I walked closer. “You read it.”
He hesitated.
That was all the confirmation I needed.
“You saw the document,” I said softly. “You know what she did.”
His laugh was sharp and humorless. “You think you uncovered some grand secret? Clara has buried worse things before breakfast.”
“She murdered my mother.”
His fists clenched. “You don’t know that.”
“She signed the liquidation order the day my mother died.”
Silence slammed between us.
Jeffrey exhaled slowly, dragging a hand through his hair. “You should let this go.”
“No.”
“You don’t get it,” he snapped. “This family doesn’t fight back. We erase.”
“I’m not afraid of her.”
He stepped close enough that I had to tilt my head to meet his gaze. “You should be afraid of what happens when she decides you’re a liability.”
I swallowed. “Are you threatening me?”
His voice dropped. “I’m warning you.”
For a second, something flickered behind his eyes, conflict, maybe guilt. Then it vanished, replaced by cold resolve.
“You’ll attend tonight’s dinner,” he said. “You’ll behave. And you’ll stop digging.”
“And if I don’t?”
His lips curved into something that wasn’t quite a smile. “Then you’ll learn why your mother never made it to the press.”
---
That evening, the estate transformed.
Crystal chandeliers glowed. Classical music drifted through the halls. The dining room filled with powerful men and women dressed in tailored suits and quiet arrogance.
Oil executives. Politicians. Board members.
People who decided the fate of countries over dessert.
I wore a deep emerald gown, elegant, restrained. Jeffrey stood beside me as we greeted guests, his hand resting possessively at my waist for show.
Every smile felt like betrayal.
Midway through dinner, I excused myself and slipped onto the terrace, lungs burning for air.
The night was cold, the garden lights casting long shadows across the hedges. I leaned against the stone railing, trying to calm my racing heart.
That was when I heard it.
Two voices. Low. Familiar.
I stepped back into the shadows.
“…the Evelyn Bennett situation resurfacing,” a man said quietly.
Clara’s voice followed, smooth and unbothered. “It won’t be an issue. Loose ends are easily handled.”
“And the girl?”
A pause.
Then Clara spoke.
“She’s becoming inconvenient.”
My breath hitched.
“Inconvenient how?” the man asked.
Clara’s reply was soft.
“Enough to consider the same solution.”
My blood turned to ice.
A hand clamped over my mouth from behind.
I tried to scream.
Darkness rushed in.
And the last thing I heard before everything went black was Jeffrey’s voice, tight and urgent in my ear.
“I told you to stop digging.”
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