3. The Shattered Kneecap
I didn’t hesitate. I didn’t offer a warning.
I raised my right leg, wearing heavy, solid-heeled leather ankle boots, and drove my foot forward with absolutely every ounce of strength my body possessed.
I didn’t aim for his groin. A strike to the groin is painful, but a highly motivated, angry man can recover from it quickly. I needed to fundamentally, physically neutralize the immediate threat blocking my only exit. I needed to ensure he could not chase me, could not grab me, and could not stop me from walking out that door.
I drove the heavy heel of my boot directly, violently into the side of Julian’s right knee.
The impact was devastating.
The sickening, wet, unmistakable CRACK of his patella forcefully shifting out of place, followed by the tearing of ligaments, echoed like a muffled gunshot in the narrow foyer.
Julian’s arrogant, sneering expression vanished in a microsecond.
He let out a high-pitched, agonizing, breathless scream that tore violently from his throat. His eyes bulged in absolute, unadulterated shock as the structural integrity of his leg gave out entirely.
He collapsed instantly, crashing heavily onto the hardwood floor like a puppet with its strings cut. He curled into a tight, pathetic ball, clutching his shattered knee with both hands, writhing in agony, his screams bouncing off the high ceilings of the entryway.
Eleanor shrieked.
The sound was a high, terrified squeal of pure panic. She stumbled backward, dropping her manicured hands from my shoulders as if I had suddenly caught fire. She stared at her son writhing on the floor, then stared at me with wide, horrified eyes.
“Julian!” Eleanor screamed, dropping to her knees on the hardwood floor beside him, her hands fluttering uselessly over his ruined leg. She looked up at me, her face a mask of absolute, furious disbelief. “You psychotic bitch! What did you do?! You broke his leg!”
“I told you,” I said quietly, my voice completely devoid of adrenaline or panic, sounding eerily detached as I looked down at them. “I am done discussing the budget.”
I stepped carefully over Julian’s thrashing legs. I didn’t look at his face. I reached up, my hand steady, unlatched the heavy brass deadbolt, and pulled the solid oak door wide open.
The cool, fresh evening air rushed into the foyer, instantly sweeping away the stifling, oppressive scent of their extortion.
I stepped out onto the porch.
I turned around, looking back at the two parasites I had almost foolishly tied my entire life, and my child’s life, to.
Julian was sobbing loudly now, tears streaming down his face, gasping for air between screams, demanding an ambulance. The ‘visionary CEO’ was reduced to a weeping, broken mess on the floor.
Eleanor was glaring at me from her knees, her eyes burning with pure, unadulterated hatred. The aristocratic mask was completely gone.
“You’re going to jail for this!” Eleanor shrieked, pointing a shaking finger at me, spit flying from her lips. “You assaulted him unprovoked! I’m calling the police right now! I’m going to have you locked up, you monster!”
I smiled. It was a cold, terrifying, and utterly humorless expression that finally made her realize the absolute gravity of her mistake.
“Please do, Eleanor,” I said softly, ensuring she heard every word. “Call them immediately. Because I have a very, very long story to tell them about how you locked me in this house and attempted to violently extort a pregnant woman.”
I turned my back on them and walked purposefully down the driveway toward my car.
I had neutralized the immediate physical threat. I was safe.
But the physical kick was only the opening salvo. They had threatened my child. They had threatened my livelihood.
As I unlocked my car and slid into the driver’s seat, the cold, tactical mind of a CEO took total control. The physical violence was over, but I was about to drop a financial and legal nuclear bomb directly onto the smoldering ruins of their greed.
4. The Financial Guillotine
I didn’t drive home. Home was where Julian’s things were. Home was where he might send someone if he realized what I was about to do.
I drove three miles to a brightly lit, heavily populated, 24-hour grocery store parking lot. I parked under a massive halogen streetlight, locked the doors, and finally allowed my hands to start shaking as the massive surge of adrenaline began to recede, leaving me exhausted but hyper-focused.
I pulled my laptop from my work bag and opened my phone.
I didn’t call 911 first. I called my attorney, Mr. Sterling.
Sterling was a ruthless, highly expensive corporate litigator who handled the contracts and acquisitions for my marketing firm. I paid him a significant retainer precisely for moments like this.
He answered on the second ring.
“Maya,” Sterling said, his voice professional and alert. “It’s late. What’s the emergency?”
“Julian and his mother just attempted to lock me inside her house and physically assault me to extort my ATM pin,” I stated, my voice steadying as I relayed the facts with clinical precision. “I had to use severe physical force to exit the premises. Julian’s knee is likely shattered. I am safe. I am currently in a public parking lot.”
There was a sharp intake of breath on the other end of the line. The corporate lawyer instantly shifted gears into crisis management.
“Are you injured?” Sterling asked sharply.
“I was shoved against a wall. I am pregnant, Sterling. I need to be evaluated, but I need to secure my assets first.”
“Understood,” Sterling replied, his tone turning into cold steel. “I will dispatch a private security detail to your residence immediately to secure the property and change the locks. I will personally contact the precinct captain to file a formal report of attempted strong-arm robbery, false imprisonment, and aggravated assault on a pregnant woman. We will control the narrative before they can spin it. What about the shared assets?”
“Burn them to the ground,” I ordered.
“Execute,” Sterling confirmed. “Go to the hospital, Maya. I will handle the police.”
I hung up the phone. I opened my laptop and connected to the grocery store’s Wi-Fi.
First, the wedding.
I accessed the portal for the luxury venue. I had paid a non-refundable $50,000 deposit. I didn’t care. I hit the ‘Cancel Event’ button, effectively terminating the reservation for the massive ballroom. I followed up with rapid, concise emails to the florist, the caterer, and the band, officially severing all contracts and halting any pending payments scheduled for the following week.
Within five minutes, the “society wedding of the year” ceased to exist.
But that was just the icing on the cake. The true retribution lay in Julian’s precious “startup.”
Julian loved playing the role of the visionary tech CEO. He loved the title. He loved the leased office space in the trendy downtown district. He loved hosting “investor meetings” that produced absolutely zero revenue.
What Julian rarely mentioned to his country club friends, and what Eleanor conveniently ignored, was that his startup was entirely, completely subsidized by me.
When he had been denied commercial loans due to his atrocious credit score, I had stepped in as the primary, silent guarantor on his massive business loans. More importantly, the lease for his trendy downtown office space was legally held under my marketing firm’s corporate umbrella, subleased to him for a fraction of the cost.
He was a parasite feeding directly from my corporate vein.
I logged into my commercial banking portal.
I navigated to the commercial loan guarantor section. I selected Julian’s accounts.
Terminate Guaranty Status. Execute.
The bank would receive the notification immediately. Without a qualified guarantor, the bank would call the massive loan into immediate default by Monday morning, freezing his operational capital instantly to secure their assets.
Next, I opened my property management software.
I drafted a formal, legally binding, immediate notice of eviction for his office space due to breach of contract and hostile action against the primary leaseholder. I emailed it directly to the building’s property manager, instructing them to deactivate his keycards by midnight.
I closed the laptop.