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The Mute Bride Is The Secret Mastermind Novel Cover

The Mute Bride Is The Secret Mastermind

I was the titan of Wall Street until an indictment and an ankle monitor turned my penthouse into a gilded cage. To save face, I was forced into a marriage with Elza, a "mute" girl from the Schmidt family whom I treated as nothing more than a silent piece of furniture while my empire crumbled. The night I was poisoned at a high-society gala, a mysterious server in an oversized uniform saved my life with terrifying, clinical precision. They disappeared into the night, leaving me with a silver cufflink and a burning obsession to find the shadow who held my life in their hands. Back home, I took my frustration out on Elza, telling her she was "exhausting to look at" and "smelled like sickness" after her charity visits. Her own family treated her like a stray dog, trying to humiliate her at the next gala by dressing her in what they claimed was a cheap knockoff while whispering to the press that she was nothing but a high-end escort. "Stay out of my way," I would growl at her, never noticing the steel in her eyes. I sat at my table, watching my rivals' stocks plummet and wondering who "The Zero"-the legendary financial ghost-really was. I never suspected that the woman I ignored was the same one solving the equations that were currently burning Manhattan to the ground. The injustice peaked when Elza stood before the city's elite, not as a victim, but as a queen. She dropped over a hundred million dollars to buy back her family's legacy, revealing a secret fortune that made my own empire look like pocket change. As I grabbed her wrist and saw the small red mole hidden beneath her watch, the truth hit me like a physical blow. The silent wife I had despised was the savior I had been hunting, and she was finally done playing the victim. "We have a lot to talk about, wife," I whispered, realizing I had been sleeping next to the most dangerous woman in the world.
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Chapter 3

The floorboards of the Schmidt manor creaked under Elza's feet. It was a sound from her childhood, a sound that meant hide .

She wasn't hiding today. She was in the small, damp room that had been hers before she was sold off to the Drakes. She knelt by the bed, prying up a loose floorboard. Beneath the dust lay a rusted tin box.

She opened it. Inside, wrapped in a silk handkerchief, was a sapphire necklace. It wasn't particularly expensive, but it was the only thing her mother had left her before she died.

The door banged open.

Elza didn't jump. She closed the box and stood up, clutching it to her chest.

Clotilde stood in the doorway, flanked by two maids. She looked immaculate in white linen, a stark contrast to the dusty room.

"Put it down," Clotilde said, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "That belongs to the estate."

Elza didn't move. Her grip on the box tightened until her knuckles turned white.

"Don't be difficult, Elza. A bastard doesn't get heirlooms. Grab it," Clotilde ordered the maids.

One of the maids, a new girl who didn't know better, reached out to snatch the box.

Elza's eyes shifted. The submissive haze vanished. As the maid's hand closed over her wrist, Elza rotated her arm. It was a subtle, practiced movement—not of a trained fighter, but of someone who had learned leverage from a book out of sheer necessity. She locked the maid's wrist joint and applied a fraction of pressure downward.

The maid yelped, dropping to her knees in pain.

Clotilde took a step back, her mouth falling open. "You..."

Elza released the maid, who scrambled back, cradling her hand. Elza pulled out her phone. She typed rapidly and held the screen up to Clotilde's face.

Prenuptial Agreement, Section 14, Paragraph B: All personal effects of Mrs. Elza Drake are considered collateral assets of Drake Holdings. Interference with these assets constitutes a federal offense under the Bankruptcy Code.

Clotilde read the text. Her face went from shock to fury. She hadn't expected the mute to have teeth. Or a lawyer.

"You think because you married that criminal you have power?" Clotilde hissed, stepping close. "He's going to prison, Elza. And when he does, you'll be back here, scrubbing floors."

Elza looked at Clotilde. She didn't glare. She looked at her half-sister the way a scientist looks at a bacteria sample. Cold. Analytical.

She pocketed the box and shouldered past Clotilde, knocking the older woman slightly off balance.

In the hallway, Victoria Schmidt was on the phone, her voice carrying down the stairs. "Oh, yes, it's tragic. Elza is... unstable. We're worried she might hurt herself."

Elza paused. She reached into her pocket, tapped the record button on her phone, and captured ten seconds of the lies. Then she walked out the front door.

When she returned to the Drake penthouse, Barron was in the foyer, arguing with his lawyer. He stopped when he saw her. His eyes dropped to the rusted tin box in her hand.

"Dumpster diving?" he sneered. "I thought I gave you a credit card."

Elza didn't respond. She offered a small, stiff bow—the perfect, obedient wife—and moved to bypass him.

Barron stepped in her path. He was agitated, needing a target. "I'm speaking to you."

Elza looked up. For a second, she forgot to mask her eyes. The fatigue was there, but beneath it was a steeliness, a quiet rage that mirrored the woman whose dark eyes had stared back at him in the bathtub at the Pierre.

Barron paused. He frowned, a flicker of recognition sparking in his brain.

Then Elza blinked, and the look was gone. She was just the dull, silent girl again.

"Go to your room," Barron muttered, rubbing his temples. "You're exhausting to look at."

Elza went to her room. She locked the door. She placed the tin box on her nightstand.

She opened her laptop. The screen glowed blue in the dim room. She logged into a secure terminal. The header read: THE ZERO - QUANTITATIVE TRADING.

She pulled up the ticker for Schmidt Industries. Specifically, the subsidiary that managed Clotilde's lifestyle brand.

Sell.

She typed in the volume. It was massive.

Execute.

She hit enter.

On the screen, a red line began to plummet. Clotilde wanted to talk about assets? Fine. Let's talk about assets.

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