Elva's boots hit the wooden steps of the grand staircase, a steady, unbothered rhythm against the backdrop of Warren's hysterical screaming.
Halfway up, she stopped.
She turned around slowly, resting both hands lightly on the polished oak railing. She looked down at the three pathetic figures huddled in the living room.
The mocking smirk vanished from her face, replaced by a terrifying, dead-eyed calm.
"You think you hold the keys, Warren?" Elva's voice cut through the large room, sharp and precise. "How about the keys to those untraceable offshore shell companies? Or the hidden ledgers you've been using to bleed the company dry?"
Warren's smug expression instantly shattered. The color drained from his face, leaving him a sickly gray. His pupils dilated in sheer panic.
Mona's eyes darted wildly between her husband and Elva. "What... what is she talking about? Warren?" she stammered, her voice trembling.
Elva didn't let up. "Your 'guardianship' was nothing but a front to bleed my mother's legacy dry and treat me like livestock you could sell to the highest bidder."
She locked eyes with Warren, her gaze pinning him to the sofa. "As of today, I am done playing your victim. You don't control me anymore."
The sheer humiliation and fear of being exposed snapped Warren's fragile ego.
With a guttural roar, he grabbed the heavy, antique blue-and-white porcelain teacup from the table and hurled it with all his might toward the stairs.
The cup smashed against the edge of the wooden step right below Elva's boots. It exploded into a dozen razor-sharp shards, the pieces flying violently through the air.
One jagged piece of porcelain sliced right past Elva's leg, tearing a small gash into the fabric of her trench coat.
Elva didn't even blink. Her breathing didn't hitch. She just stood there, staring at him as the ceramic dust settled.
"If you ruin this marriage tomorrow," Warren roared, his chest heaving, spit flying from his lips, "I will make sure you are blacklisted from every job, every apartment, every corner of New York! I will destroy you!"
Elva looked at him, watching his pathetic, impotent rage like she was watching a poorly written sitcom.
Without another word, she turned her back on him and continued up the stairs, leaving his threats to echo uselessly in the foyer.
She walked down the long, carpeted hallway and pushed open the door to her bedroom-a cramped, sunless space they had forced her into.
She stepped inside, shut the door, and threw the deadbolt, locking out the stench of the Schmitt family's desperation.
Downstairs, Warren collapsed back onto the sofa, clutching his chest, gasping for air.
Mona rushed to his side, rubbing his back. Her eyes narrowed into venomous slits.
"She's out of control, Warren," Mona whispered, her voice dripping with poison. "If she won't listen to reason, we have to force her. Tomorrow morning, I'll slip something into her breakfast. Just enough to make her weak, unable to speak or fight back when the Ramirez family arrives."
Haylie, who had been cowering behind the sofa, popped her head up. A sick, excited grin spread across her face. "Yes! Make her look like an idiot in front of them!"
Warren's eyes gleamed with a dark, vicious light. He clenched his jaw and nodded. "Do it."
Upstairs, completely unaware of the pathetic plot hatching below, Elva walked over to the small window and stared out into the pitch-black night.
She reached into her bag and pulled out the marriage certificate. Her thumb gently brushed over the crisp ink of Bronson Ramirez's name.
She pulled out her phone and opened a heavily encrypted, untraceable messaging app. Her fingers flew across the screen, firing off a single, precise command to a highly classified contact: 'Pull all of Warren Schmitt's gray assets and offshore transfers. I need the final nails for his coffin.' Within seconds, the screen flooded with incoming files-detailed financial data, bank transfers, and hidden ledgers.
She slipped the three-carat pink diamond off her finger, holding it up to the moonlight. The gem fractured the light, throwing brilliant pink sparks across the dark room.
Elva slid the ring back onto her finger. Her jaw set. She was ready for blood.
She yanked the curtains shut, plunging the room into darkness. The storm was coming.
The first rays of morning sun sliced through the gap in the curtains, hitting Elva's face. Her eyes snapped open.
There was no grogginess. No anxiety about the impending forced marriage. Her mind was razor-sharp, her body thrumming with cold, calculated energy.
She threw off the covers and moved quickly through her morning routine.
She glanced at the trench coat tossed over the chair, her eyes locking onto the small gash near the hem where Warren's porcelain cup had sliced it. Without a second thought, she picked up the ruined coat and threw it straight into the trash can, discarding it like the pathetic, toxic history of the Schmitt family.
Opening the closet, she bypassed the dull, faded dresses Mona usually forced her to wear. Instead, she pulled out a sharp, tailored black power suit. It hugged her frame perfectly, radiating pure, aggressive authority.
She pulled her long hair back into a tight, flawless chignon, exposing the sharp lines of her jaw. She swiped a bold, blood-red lipstick across her lips.
Looking in the mirror, she didn't see a victim. She saw a queen stepping onto a battlefield.
She unlocked her door and stepped out. Her high heels clicked against the hardwood floors, a sharp clack-clack-clack that echoed down the stairs like a countdown.
In the living room, the Schmitt family was already in position, dressed to the nines.
Haylie was lounging in an overly expensive, but deliberately casual silk robe, her chin tilted up in pure arrogance. She had intentionally dressed down, wanting to project absolute disdain and disrespect for the 'crippled old freak' she assumed was rolling through their doors.
As Elva reached the bottom step, Mona intercepted her. She held a steaming glass of milk, a sickeningly sweet, fake smile plastered on her face.
"Morning, Elva," Mona cooed. "Drink this. I made it specially for you to calm your nerves."
Elva's eyes flicked to the glass. Her military-trained instincts instantly picked up the microscopic tremor in Mona's hand and the nervous, calculating twitch in her left eye.
Elva didn't break her stride. She simply turned her shoulder, smoothly bypassing Mona without even brushing against the glass.
"I don't drink poison before 10 AM," Elva said flatly.
Mona's fake smile shattered. Her hand hung awkwardly in the air, the milk sloshing over the rim.
Warren, seeing his wife humiliated, took a step forward, his face darkening with rage. "You ungrateful little-"
Before he could finish the threat, a deep, thunderous roar of a high-performance engine vibrated through the walls of the estate.
A heavy, imposing silence fell over the room.
Then, the doorbell chimed. A long, demanding sound.
Warren instantly swallowed his rage. He slapped on a grotesque, fawning smile and frantically waved at the butler. "Open the door! Quickly!"
Haylie lazily adjusted her silk robe, her eyes practically glowing with malicious anticipation. She couldn't wait to see the look of utter despair on Elva's face when the crippled freak rolled in.
The butler hurried to the foyer and pulled open the heavy carved doors.
Everyone held their breath, their eyes glued to the entrance, waiting for the wheelchair.
Instead, the first thing to cross the threshold was a polished ebony walking stick, its handle encrusted with a massive, blood-red ruby.
An elderly man stepped into the light. He had silver hair, a straight back, and an aura of absolute, terrifying authority. It was Cornelius Ramirez, the patriarch of the Ramirez dynasty.
Warren's jaw practically hit the floor. His mind short-circuited. Why would the supreme head of the family show up for the marriage of a disgraced, distant relative?
But the real shock was yet to come.
Stepping out from behind Cornelius was a man who sucked all the oxygen out of the room.
Bronson Ramirez strode into the foyer. He was wearing a bespoke navy-blue suit that clung to his broad shoulders. His presence was so overwhelmingly dominant, so suffocatingly powerful, that the Schmitts instinctively took a step back.
He walked with the smooth, predatory grace of a panther. His cold, dark eyes swept the room and instantly locked onto Elva, who was standing near the stairs.
There was no wheelchair. There was no ugly, old man. There was only the undisputed king of Wall Street.
The Schmitt family stood frozen, their brains completely crashing.
Haylie stared at Bronson's chiseled jaw and broad chest. Her smug expression violently shattered. Panic and profound regret clawed at her throat for dressing so carelessly in front of a literal god. The mockery in her eyes was instantly replaced by a rabid, consuming lust.
Elva stood perfectly still. She watched Bronson approach, a tiny, almost invisible smirk playing on her red lips.
The slaughter was about to begin.
The air in the living room turned to concrete. The sheer, crushing gravity of Bronson's presence pressed down on the Schmitt family, making it hard for them to breathe.
Warren was the first to snap out of his paralysis. He violently pinched his own thigh, the sharp pain confirming he wasn't hallucinating.
He scrambled forward, his face contorting into a mask of extreme, nauseating sycophancy. He thrust both hands out, desperate to grasp Cornelius's hand.
"Mr. Ramirez! What an absolute honor!" Warren practically squeaked.
Cornelius didn't even break his stride. He cast a freezing, dismissive glance at Warren's outstretched hands and walked right past him, heading straight for the center sofa.
Warren's hands hung in the empty air. He awkwardly pulled them back, his face burning, and quickly pivoted to Bronson, bowing so low his back almost snapped.
Bronson treated him like a piece of ugly furniture. He walked past Warren and lowered his large frame gracefully into a single leather armchair, crossing one long leg over the other.
Cornelius lifted his ebony cane and struck the marble floor. Clack.
The sharp sound instantly silenced the room.
"I am here to finalize the marriage arrangement between our families," Cornelius announced, his voice echoing with unquestionable authority.
Warren trembled with pure ecstasy. "Yes, yes, of course! We are completely ready!" He had completely forgotten the original lie about the crippled relative.
Cornelius turned slightly, gesturing to the man sitting in the armchair. "Allow me to formally introduce the groom. My eldest grandson, and the sole heir to the Ramirez dynasty, Bronson."
The words hit the Schmitt family like a localized earthquake.
Mona clapped both hands over her mouth, her eyes wide with shock and manic joy. They had hit the ultimate jackpot.
Haylie's breathing turned shallow. Her eyes devoured Bronson's handsome face and expensive suit. Her mind raced, instantly convincing herself that this god-like heir could not possibly be meant for plain, insignificant Elva. The arrangement was clearly a mere formality—a placeholder until the Ramirez family laid eyes on her, the true prize of the Schmitt household. She would make them see that she was the only logical choice.
She frantically tried to pull the edges of her casual robe together to look somewhat presentable, pasted on her most sickeningly sweet, innocent smile, and practically glided over to Bronson's chair.
"Mr. Ramirez," Haylie cooed, pitching her voice to sound like a delicate Southern belle. "It is such a pleasure to finally meet you."
Bronson didn't blink. He didn't turn his head. He stared straight ahead, treating her existence as nothing more than a mild draft in the room.
Haylie's smile stiffened, a flush of embarrassment creeping up her neck. But her greed quickly overrode her shame. She convinced herself that billionaires were just naturally aloof, and that once he noticed her, everything would change.
Behind Cornelius, a stone-faced assistant stepped forward and placed a thick, sealed document file onto the glass coffee table.
"This," Cornelius declared, "is the wedding gift from the Ramirez family. A marital trust fund valued at two billion dollars."
Two billion.
The number physically punched Warren in the gut. The blood vessels in his eyes expanded, turning his vision red with raw, unfiltered greed. His mind seized on the figure. Two billion dollars, and it all hinged on delivering the bride. His gaze darted instinctively toward Elva, still standing quietly near the stairs. For a split second, his lips parted to summon her forward, to present her like a winning lottery ticket and claim this fortune before anything could go wrong. But then his eyes flicked to Haylie, who had draped herself inches from Bronson's chair, and cold calculation overtook him. The Ramirezes hadn't asked for Elva by name. They wanted a bride from the Schmitt family. If Haylie could charm her way into the heir's favor right now, the deal could be closed tonight on even better terms, with his biological daughter as the rightful wife. He decided to buy Haylie a few precious minutes. Elva could always be produced as a backup if Haylie's gambit failed.
Haylie let out a strangled gasp of delight. She spun around, her eyes landing on Elva. A flicker of cold, calculating malice crossed her face before she masked it with theatrical condescension. She knew perfectly well that Elva was the designated bride, which was precisely why the girl needed to be removed from sight immediately, before anyone in the Ramirez entourage could acknowledge her.
"Elva," Haylie snapped, her voice dripping with condescension. "What are you still doing here? Go back to your room."
She waved her hand dismissively. "This is a high-society matter. It has nothing to do with a country girl like you."
Elva crossed her arms over her chest. She looked at Haylie with the kind of pity usually reserved for the severely brain-damaged. She didn't move an inch.
Warren, reading Haylie's play perfectly and terrified that Elva's presence would derail his daughter's brazen attempt to seduce the heir, turned on her.
"Did you hear her?!" Warren barked, pointing a shaking finger at the stairs. "Get upstairs immediately! You are embarrassing us!"
The tension in the room snapped tight.
Suddenly, a low, dark scoff broke the silence.
Bronson's long, knuckle-scarred fingers began to tap against the leather armrest. Tap. Tap. Tap.
The rhythmic sound sent a chill down Warren's spine.
Bronson slowly lifted his head. His eyes, cold and sharp as obsidian blades, sliced through the Schmitt family, completely ignoring Haylie, and locked dead onto Elva.