The rain in the city was relentless. Inside a cramped, studio apartment that smelled of mildew and stale takeout, Mark sat on a futon.
He was watching CNBC.
Breaking News: The elusive founder of NovaStream finally steps into the light.
On the screen, Elena stood at a podium at the Global Economic Summit. She wasn’t wearing the simple clothes of a housewife anymore. She wore a tailored white suit that cost more than Mark’s entire former salary. She looked radiant. Powerful.
“Ms. Vance,” a reporter asked. “For years, the market thought NovaStream was run by a board of directors. Why reveal yourself now?”
Elena looked directly into the camera. Her eyes were clear.
“Because I realized that hiding my strength didn’t protect me,” she said. “It only invited weakness into my home. In business, as in life, you must eliminate toxic assets. Once I did that… the path became clear.”
Mark turned off the TV.
His phone was silent. Jessica had blocked him the moment the police started asking questions. His “friends” from the office—the ones who laughed at his jokes and drank his champagne—had ghosted him. He had applied for three jobs; all rejected him. Elena hadn’t just fired him; she had nuked his reputation.
He looked at the divorce settlement on the table. It was brutal. She had taken the house (which she paid for), the cars (which she paid for), and the investments. He was left with his 401k, which was currently being garnished to pay back the embezzled funds.
He had held a diamond in his hand and traded it for a piece of glass.
Elena walked out of the summit, flanked by Sterling and her security team. The air was crisp and clean.
“Ma’am,” her assistant said, holding out a tablet. “We have a situation at the gate. Your ex-husband is there. He’s… asking to see you.”
Elena paused. “What does he want?”
“He says he wants to return his wedding ring. He’s hoping… well, he’s hoping you might buy it back from him. He says he needs the money for rent.”
Elena looked at her own hand. The ring finger was bare. She had already melted her ring down and donated the gold to a women’s shelter.
“Tell him,” Elena said, her voice devoid of malice, “that NovaStream does not purchase distressed assets.”
“And the ring?”
“Tell him to pawn it. It’s the only thing of value he has left.”
She walked toward her car—a sleek, black phantom. The driver opened the door.
“Where to, Ms. Vance?”
Elena looked at the skyline. For years, her world had been small—limited to the kitchen, the laundry room, and the shadow of a man she tried to build. Now, the horizon seemed endless.
“The airport,” she said. “I have a meeting in Tokyo. And then… maybe Paris for the weekend. Just for me.”
“Understood.”
As the car pulled away, merging into the stream of lights, Elena’s phone buzzed.
It was a text from an unknown number.
To: Elena Vance
From: Julian Thorne (CEO of OmniCorp)
Message: I saw your speech. Ruthless. Elegant. I’ve been trying to buy you dinner for five years, but your ‘proxy’ always declined. Now that you’re in the driver’s seat… table for two at Le Bernardin?
Julian Thorne. Her biggest rival. The only man in the industry who had ever given her a run for her money.
Elena smirked. She typed back.
Message: If you want to eat with me, Julian, bring your A-game. I don’t carry passengers anymore.
She hit send and tossed the phone onto the seat. She watched the city blur past, a symphony of light and motion. She wasn’t a wife. She wasn’t a shadow. She was the Architect. And she was just getting started.
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.
See more on the next page
Advertisement