
The Contract Wife's Silent Revenge
Chapter 6
I woke to darkness.
Not the soft, comforting black of night, but the kind that presses against your skin and lungs, heavy and immovable.
My wrists ached. My legs were cramped. I was strapped to a chair in a room that smelled faintly of polished wood and antiseptic.
Panic rose in my throat, sharp and bitter, but I forced it down. Letting it loose would only make me weaker.
I scanned the room. Minimal light, a single bulb hanging from the ceiling. No windows. Just steel walls, a desk in the corner, and a manila folder lying face-down.
Then I heard the door click.
Jeffrey stepped in. His presence was silent but commanding. Even in that dim light, I could see the sharp planes of his face, the way his eyes were dark, unreadable, and terrifyingly calm.
“You woke up,” he said, voice low. “Good.”
I glared at him. “Do you always take people hostage in your own home?”
He ignored the sarcasm. He walked to the folder and lifted it. Inside, pages fanned out, financial statements, photographs, handwritten notes. Evidence of Clara’s empire and the skeletons it buried.
“I gave you a chance to walk away,” he said. “To leave before things got… messy. But you couldn’t resist.”
----
“I had to know the truth,” I replied. “You saw it too. You read the document.”
Jeffrey set the folder down, leaning against the desk. “Yes. I saw it. But you don’t understand the weight of what you hold. Not yet.”
I swallowed hard, trying to ignore the ropes biting into my wrists. “Explain.”
“You’ve just stepped into a world where curiosity kills more than cats,” he said. “Clara doesn’t forgive mistakes. She erases threats. And you,” His eyes met mine, sharp and intense. “You’re a threat.”
My chest tightened, but I refused to show fear. “So am I supposed to beg for mercy?”
Jeffrey smirked, leaning closer, until the shadow of his face fell over mine. “No. I don’t want mercy. I want to see how far you’ll go. How clever you are under pressure. Whether you’re capable of surviving in my world… or whether you’ll be another name buried under polished floors and smiling masks.”
I didn’t flinch. Instead, I met his gaze head-on. “I’ve survived worse than you, and I’ll survive this too.”
-----
He studied me, as if measuring my soul.
Then he straightened, crossing to the door. “Tonight, you’ll meet Clara again. But this time, it won’t be a dinner. It’ll be… an initiation.
She wants to see how resourceful you are when the walls close in.”
My heart pounded. “Initiation?”
“You’ll find out soon enough,” he said, voice icy. “And Letty…” He paused at the door, looking back at me. “Don’t underestimate her and don’t underestimate yourself. You’re playing a dangerous game, and the stakes are higher than you imagine.”
The door clicked shut, leaving me in silence again.
I exhaled slowly, leaning back in the chair. Fear still throbbed in my chest, but underneath it, a pulse of determination ignited. They wanted me scared. They wanted me broken.
They would get neither.
I studied the folder on the desk, daring myself to reach for it. Every fiber in me screamed caution. But every lesson I’d learned about patience, observation, and strategy pushed me forward.
I untied my ropes slowly, muscles screaming, heart hammering. Every motion deliberate. Every second counted.
Once free, I examined the folder, absorbing every detail, every connection, every lie Clara had buried over the years.
My mind mapped the empire like a battlefield. I realized something chilling: survival wasn’t enough. I had to dismantle everything, brick by brick, shadow by shadow.
----
The sound of footsteps outside made me freeze.
A lock clicked. The door opened.
Clara Frank stepped in.
Silk and power, her presence was a storm contained in human form.
She smiled at me like a cat with prey in sight. “So, my little Mrs. Frank,” she purred. “Curious enough to find out more than you were supposed to?”
I lifted my chin, forcing calm. “Curiosity isn’t a crime.”
Her smile widened. “It is when it threatens me.”
She circled me, slow and deliberate, letting her heels click against the polished floor. “Do you have any idea what you’re touching? How easily this could all end?”
“I do,” I said. “And yet… here I am.”
Clara stopped in front of me, close enough that I could smell the expensive scent of her perfume. “Brave,” she whispered. “Or foolish. Time will tell.”
She straightened and gestured to the folder. “I’m giving you a choice. Return it, walk away, and forget everything you’ve seen. Or keep it and… see just how far you can fall.”
I swallowed. The choice wasn’t mine alone. Not really. My father. My mother’s memory. Everything I had left, it demanded that I act.
I reached for the folder.
Clara’s smile turned razor-sharp. “Very well, Letty. Let’s see what you’re made of.”
The room went silent. The weight of her words hung like steel in the air.
I knew then that nothing would ever be the same.
And that night, the real game began.
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