He struck me so hard my lip split and bled, all because I asked where he had been the night before. At dawn, I quietly prepared a massive Southern feast and set out the silver cutlery. “That’s a good wife,” he gloated, taking his seat at the head of the table. But the color vanished from his face when the kitchen doors swung open and my three older brothers—captains of the city’s most feared underground syndicate—walked out, wiping their hands on my spotless white napkins.He slapped me so hard my lip tore against my teeth, and the blood tasted like copper and warning. All I had asked was, “Where were you last night?”Marcus Vance stood above me in our marble kitchen, still dressed in yesterday’s shirt and carrying another woman’s perfume. His wedding ring flashed beneath the chandelier like a bad joke.Don’t question me in my own house,” he said.My own house. That was the funny part.
I pressed two fingers to my mouth. They came away red. He watched me, waiting for tears, apologies, that tiny shaking voice I had perfected through two years of marriage.nstead, I lowered my hand and smiled.For half a second, it disturbed him.Then he laughed. “Look at you. Still trying to be brave.”Behind him, his mother, Celeste, emerged from the hallway in her silk robe, face powdered, eyes cold. She had heard everything. She always heard everything.“Some women don’t understand gratitude,” she said. “My son rescued you from nothing.” looked around the room I had paid for with money Marcus believed came from “family investments.” The imported tile. The copper pans. The antique sideboard. He had signed nothing, owned nothing, understood nothing.That was his gift.Go clean yourself up,” Marcus snapped. “And tomorrow morning, I expect breakfast. A real one. None of your sulking.”smiled. “A good wife knows when to be quiet.” nodded once.That was all.Because the cameras had recorded the slap. The microphones hidden beneath the kitchen island had captured every word. The private investigator I hired three months earlier had documented the affair, the forged loan papers, the offshore transfers, and the way Marcus had been handing my company’s contracts to his gambling creditors.