
The Villainess Stepmother's Ruthless New Life
Chapter 11
The silence in the dining room was thick enough to choke on. It was a physical weight, pressing down on Gloria's chest, making the simple act of breathing feel like manual labor.
Arthur sat at the head of the table, his fork suspended in mid-air. His eyes, the color of a stormy ocean, were locked onto hers. He wasn't blinking.
"Do you?" Arthur repeated. His voice was low, a rumble that vibrated through the mahogany table and straight into the soles of Gloria's feet.
Gloria's brain misfired. She had a split second to salvage this. If she stuttered, she looked guilty. If she admitted it, she was insane.
She forced a laugh. It sounded dry, like cracking paper.
"Arthur, please," she said, waving a dismissive hand. She grabbed her water glass, her knuckles turning white around the crystal stem. "Don't be jealous. That is a perk reserved strictly for the punishment zone."
Jones, who had been staring into his water glass as if it contained the secrets of the universe, suddenly snorted. He buried his face in his cup, his shoulders shaking with silent, repressed laughter.
Arthur didn't laugh. He didn't even smile. But one eyebrow arched upward, a millimeter of movement that screamed skepticism. He lowered his fork slowly to his plate. He wasn't buying it, but he wasn't going to execute her in front of the salad course.
Gloria needed a diversion. A big one.
She turned her gaze to Gustavo. The boy was vibrating with energy, his mouth opening to launch another grenade of truth into the conversation.
"Eat your broccoli," Gloria commanded. She pointed at his plate with a knife. "Do not try to distract us with gossip."
Gustavo's eyes widened. He opened his mouth again, ready to protest, ready to spill more secrets about Mommy's new rules.
Gloria narrowed her eyes. She didn't say a word. She just channeled every ounce of the "Silence Witch" persona she had crafted earlier. She widened her eyes slightly, a silent, chilling reminder of the story she'd told him. The story of the invisible thread.
Gustavo's mouth snapped shut with an audible click. He looked at the fireplace nervously, as if he could almost feel the phantom touch of soot or long, cold fingers.
Arthur watched the exchange. His mind flickered back to the security feed he'd reviewed earlier, the one that showed Gloria crouching down and whispering that bizarre fairy tale to his son. It was unorthodox, but the result was a quiet child. He couldn't decide if he was impressed or disturbed. He cut into his steak with surgical precision.
"Mrs. Higgins," Gustavo whispered. He looked at the nanny standing in the shadows. He opened his mouth like a baby bird.
Mrs. Higgins, conditioned by years of indulging the Little Emperor, immediately stepped forward with a silver spoon.
"Put it down," Gloria said.
Her voice wasn't loud, but it was sharp. It cut through the room like a whip.
Mrs. Higgins froze. The spoon hovered inches from Gustavo's mouth.
"Madam?" the nanny asked, confused.
"Gustavo must eat by himself," Gloria announced. She looked at Arthur, then back to the boy. "He is a Sterling man. He is not disabled. He has working hands."
Gustavo looked at his mother as if she had just grown a second head. The betrayal on his face was absolute. He let out a wail, a high-pitched siren of protest.
"I can't!" he cried, tears instantly pooling in his eyes. "My arms are tired!"
Arthur stopped eating. He leaned back in his chair, crossing his arms over his chest. He looked from the crying child to his wife. He was waiting. He wanted to see if she would crack.
Gloria didn't crack. She took a bite of her salad. She chewed slowly. She swallowed.
"Tired arms don't get islands," she said calmly, looking at the ceiling.
Gustavo's crying hitched. He sniffled. He looked across the table at Jones.
Jones was cutting his own steak. He was using a knife and fork with ease. He looked cool. He looked like Iron Man.
With a trembling hand, Gustavo picked up his spoon. He stabbed a piece of broccoli. He shoved the vegetable into his mouth, chewing aggressively.
Arthur shifted in his seat. The cold, predatory look in his eyes had changed. It wasn't warm yet—warmth was foreign to Arthur Sterling—but it was curious. He was looking at Gloria like she was a puzzle he couldn't quite solve.
Gloria felt his gaze burning into her skin. She stood up abruptly.
"I need to do my skincare routine," she announced. "The stress of this dinner is giving me wrinkles."
She turned and walked out of the dining room, moving fast. She felt like she was fleeing a crime scene.
An hour later, as she was about to get into bed, the intercom in her dressing room chimed.
"My study. Now," Arthur's voice commanded, devoid of warmth but carrying an undercurrent of something she couldn't place.
Gloria's stomach twisted. She pulled on a silk robe and walked down the silent hallway. He was sitting behind his massive desk, a single lamp illuminating a tablet in his hand. He didn't invite her to sit.
"The fifty-thousand-dollar check I gave you," he began, not looking up. "A test."
"A test?" Gloria repeated, her voice tight.
"To see if you'd run," he said. "You didn't. You stayed. You handled the neighbor. You handled dinner. You are... managing my assets effectively." He gestured to the boys' rooms down the hall. "My most important assets."
He finally looked up. "The original household allowance I set for you is suspended. Consider this your new operating budget."
He swiped his thumb on the tablet and turned it to face her.
It was a bank transfer confirmation. From the Sterling Family Trust to her personal account.
$500,000.00.
Not fifty thousand. Half a million. Five zeros. A beautiful, life-altering comma.
Gloria's breath hitched in her throat. She counted the zeros again, her finger hovering over the glass, terrified that touching it might cause the pixelated fortune to evaporate. This wasn't a bonus. This was a statement. This was oxygen. This was a shield against the sharks circling her past life.
"This is not a gift, Gloria," Arthur said, his voice a low rumble. "This is a salary. You are the CEO of this household. I expect a return on my investment. I expect my sons to be protected. I expect my home to be managed. Do we have an agreement?"
Gloria stared at the screen, then at his face. He was giving her the keys to a small kingdom, but he was also putting a crown of responsibility on her head. It was terrifying. It was everything she needed.
She nodded slowly. "Agreement."
"Good," he said, turning the tablet back around. "You're dismissed."
Gloria walked out of the study, her legs feeling like jelly. She made it back to the master suite, the numbers burning behind her eyes. Half a million. It wasn't freedom. But it was a start. It was seed money. She closed the heavy bedroom door behind her, the weight of the day, the dinner, the money, finally crashing down on her. She didn't even bother to turn on the lights. She just stumbled toward the bed, collapsing onto the cool sheets, her mind already spinning with plans. The game was on.
The master suite was dark.
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