Harrison stopped dead in his tracks when he saw the two men standing on the front porch. A massive, arrogant grin broke across his face. He dropped his suitcase and practically sprinted toward them, extending his hand.
“Marcus! Mr. Thorne! I can’t believe you came in person!” Harrison’s voice carried across the quiet street, thick with obsequious charm. “I know we talked about doing a walk-through for the collateral appraisal next week, but I love the initiative. Welcome to my home!”
Marcus Thorne did not take Harrison’s hand. He looked at Harrison with the cold, detached curiosity of a scientist observing an insect.
“Mr. Chase, isn’t it?” Marcus said, his voice flat.
“Yes, absolutely. Please, let me show you inside,” Harrison gestured grandly to the mahogany doors. “I think you’ll find the property more than covers the valuation we discussed for the Synergy Tech loan.”
Eleanor tottered up the steps, offering a regal nod to the investors. “Welcome to our estate, gentlemen. My son has built quite the sanctuary here.”
Harrison turned to the keypad. He puffed out his chest, shot a knowing, triumphant look at his mother, and punched in his new code.
Beep. Beep. Beep. Beep. Beep. Beep.
Red light.
Harrison frowned. He cleared the keypad and typed it again, slower this time.
Red light.
Chloe laughed from the bottom of the stairs, still filming. “God, Harry, did you forget your own master code already? Too many margaritas?”
“Shut up, Chloe,” Harrison hissed. He jammed his finger into the keypad a third time.
Red light.
Eleanor pushed him aside. “Oh, move over. You have fat fingers.” She typed the code with dramatic, exaggerated movements.
Red light.
“Perhaps the battery is dead,” Eleanor said nervously, glancing at the Apex executives, trying to maintain her aristocratic air. “The help usually handles these maintenance issues.”
Marcus Thorne exchanged a glance with his lawyer. The lawyer pulled a clipboard from his portfolio.
“The battery isn’t dead, Mr. Chase,” Marcus said, his tone dropping several degrees in warmth. “The security system was completely overridden and reset this morning by our private security firm.”
Harrison froze. He looked from Marcus to the keypad, his brain struggling to process the words. “Your… your security firm? What are you talking about? This is my house.”
“Actually,” Julian said, rolling down the tinted window of our sedan, his voice carrying perfectly in the crisp air. “It isn’t.”
All three of them whipped their heads toward the street.
I opened the heavy door of the sedan and stepped out. I didn’t hobble this time. My posture was perfectly straight. I wore a tailored crimson blazer over a black silk blouse, my hair pulled back in a severe, flawless twist. I looked exactly like the corporate assassin Harrison had forgotten he married.
I walked across the asphalt, the click of my heels echoing like gunshots in the silence.
The color drained from Harrison’s tanned face in a spectacular rush, leaving him looking like wet chalk. “Victoria. What are you doing here? Get back in the car.” He looked frantically at the investors. “I apologize, gentlemen, my wife is… she’s been dealing with severe postpartum psychosis. She’s not well.”
Marcus Thorne ignored him. He looked at me and offered a respectful, polite nod. “Mrs. Chase. The wire transfer was confirmed yesterday. A pleasure doing business with you. The property is spectacular.”
“Thank you, Mr. Thorne,” I replied smoothly. “I trust you found the furnishings to your liking?”
“Exceptional,” the lawyer chimed in.
Eleanor staggered backward, her hand flying to her chest. “Business? Wire transfer? What is she talking about, Harrison?”
Harrison lunged toward me, his fists clenched, his mask of civility completely shattering. “What did you do?!” he roared.
Julian was out of the car in a flash, standing smoothly between me and Harrison. At the same time, the front door of the house clicked open from the inside. Two massive private security guards in tactical gear stepped out onto the porch, flanking the investors.
Harrison stopped, breathing heavily, his eyes darting wildly like a cornered animal.
“I sold my house, Harrison,” I said, my voice barely above a whisper, yet it commanded the entire street.
“You can’t do that!” he screamed, spittle flying from his lips. “You need my signature! Half of this is mine! I’m taking the loan!”
“You don’t have a loan, Harrison,” Marcus Thorne interrupted, his voice dripping with disgust. “And you don’t have equity. We reviewed the title documents and the prenuptial agreement before we purchased the estate from Mrs. Chase. You own absolutely nothing here. Furthermore, after reviewing your financial disclosures, Apex Sterling has officially rejected your application for funding. Synergy Tech is un-investable.”
Harrison literally stumbled back, clutching his chest as if he had been physically shot. The dual blow—losing the house and his company in thirty seconds—short-circuited his brain.
“My… my house,” Eleanor whimpered, staring at the imposing security guards blocking the door. “My dining table. My imported rugs!”
“Included in the sale, Eleanor,” I said brightly.
“You vindictive bitch!” Chloe shrieked, dropping her phone. “We live here! All our stuff is in there! My clothes!”
The Apex lawyer consulted his clipboard. “According to the terms of the sale, the property was purchased as-is, fully furnished. Any personal items left on the premises have been boxed by the seller’s movers. They are currently sitting by the side gate.”
He pointed to a stack of cheap cardboard boxes resting near the trash cans.
Harrison fell to his knees on the pavement. Real, genuine tears began to stream down his face. “Victoria, please,” he begged, his voice cracking. “Please. Don’t do this. We have a baby. We’re a family. You can’t put us on the street.”
I looked down at the man I had once sworn to love. I felt no pity. I felt no anger. I felt nothing but a clean, sweeping emptiness, like a room that had finally been cleared of rot.
“You put your three-day-old daughter on the street in the freezing rain to secure a fraudulent bank loan,” I said, my voice cold enough to freeze nitrogen. “You tried to steal my legacy. I am simply closing the account.”
I turned my attention to Chloe. She was shivering, clutching her arms, looking at me with pure terror.
I took two steps toward her and held out my right hand.
“Take off the ring, Chloe.”
“I… I don’t know what you’re talking about,” she stammered, stepping behind her mother.
“My mother’s sapphire ring,” I said, my voice dropping to a dangerous, lethal register. “The one you’ve been parading around Cabo for a week. Take it off, or I tell the two police officers pulling up behind you that you stole a forty-thousand-dollar insured heirloom from my hospital room.”
Chloe gasped. The sound of tires crunching on gravel announced the arrival of a local patrol car. Julian had called them ten minutes ago. Just to keep the peace, he had said.
Chloe frantically yanked the ring off her finger, nearly tearing her skin, and dropped it into my open palm.
The cold metal pressed against my skin, and for the first time in a week, I felt a genuine smile touch my lips. I slipped it onto my finger. It fit perfectly.
“Have a nice life, Harrison,” I said, turning my back on him.
I walked back to the sedan, got in, and closed the door. The sound of their screaming faded behind the thick glass. I looked into the backseat. Madeline was still sleeping, a tiny, peaceful smile on her face.
We drove away, leaving them standing in the driveway with their luxury luggage and cardboard boxes, screaming at a locked door they would never open again.
The divorce was finalized six months later. It was a bloodbath for Harrison. With no capital and no collateral, Synergy Tech folded within thirty days. He moved into a two-bedroom apartment with Eleanor and Chloe. Last I heard, Eleanor was working the cosmetics counter at a mid-tier department store, and Harrison was driving for a ride-share app to pay off his legal debts.
Madeline and I are thriving in the townhouse. It’s filled with light, music from my grandmother’s piano, and the absolute certainty that no one will ever hold the keys to our safety but us.
Some people build empires. Others try to steal them.
And if there is one thing I’ve learned about empires, it’s that the foundation is everything.
If you want more stories like this, or if you’d like to share your thoughts about what you would have done in my situation, I’d love to hear from you. Your perspective helps these stories reach more people, so don’t be shy about commenting or sharing.