In the sanctuary of the restroom stall, Evelyn cleaned herself up. She looked at the jacket hanging on the hook. There was a small smear of blood on the silk lining.
She checked the label. Savile Row. Bespoke. 100% Vicuña Wool. This jacket cost more than her car.
She sighed, defeated. She couldn't just leave it here. She had to clean it. She was a chemist; she knew how to remove protein stains without damaging the fibers.
She wrapped the jacket in a plastic bag she found in the supply closet and put it in her tote bag. She left the building, head down.
When she arrived back at the penthouse, she tried to sneak directly to the laundry room where she kept her specialized solvents.
"Evelyn?"
Julian's voice. He was home early. He was standing in the hallway, holding a glass of scotch.
He looked at her. Then he looked at the tote bag. A sleeve of the navy jacket was sticking out.
"What is that?" he asked.
Evelyn adjusted her grip. "Just dry cleaning."
Julian walked over. He pulled the jacket out of the bag before she could stop him. He held it up. It was massive compared to his frame. He brought it to his nose and sniffed.
It smelled of sandalwood. And underneath that, a faint, metallic tang. Iron.
Julian's face twisted. He didn't identify the blood immediately; his mind went to something else. Roughness. Another man.
"Who is he?" Julian demanded. "You're seeing someone?"
Evelyn laughed. It was a reflex. "You're asking me that? Really?"
Julian grabbed her arm. His fingers dug into her bicep. "I am your husband, Evelyn. You represent me. If you are embarrassing me-"
The pain was sharp. It triggered something primal in her.
Evelyn didn't think. She reacted. She had taken self-defense classes for three years-"cardio kickboxing," she had told Julian.
She twisted her arm, rotating against his thumb, breaking his grip instantly. In the same motion, she shoved him back, creating distance. It wasn't a master martial arts move, but it was effective.
Julian stumbled back, crashing into the hallway console table. A Ming vase wobbled and fell, shattering into a thousand pieces.
Silence followed the crash.
Julian stood there, rubbing his wrist, looking at her with total shock. He had never seen her fight back. He had never seen her as anything other than soft.
"I took a women's safety course at the club," Evelyn lied, her chest heaving. "They taught us how to deal with aggressors."
She picked up Alistair's jacket from where Julian had dropped it.
"Touch me again," she said, her voice low and devoid of emotion, "and I will file a police report. Imagine the headlines, Julian."
She walked past him, stepping over the broken porcelain. She went into the guest bedroom and locked the door. She collapsed on the bed, her hands shaking, not from fear, but from the terrifying realization of how good it felt to hurt him.
The next morning, the apartment was quiet. The shattered vase was gone, swept away by the housekeeper who came at dawn.
Evelyn emerged from the guest room, dressed for battle in a sleek black dress. She walked into the kitchen.
On the granite island sat a massive bouquet of white roses. At least four dozen. They looked like a funeral arrangement.
Next to them was a card: I'm sorry. Stress at work. Forgive me?
Julian walked in from the living room. He looked sheepish, holding a small envelope.
"I overreacted," he said, using his "charming boy" voice, the one that worked on investors. "I've just been under so much pressure with the IPO. And when I saw that coat... I got jealous."
Evelyn felt bile rise. He was gaslighting her. Rewriting history less than twelve hours after it happened.
She decided to play the game. The clock was ticking down.
"I know," she said, forcing a tight smile. "We're both tired."
Julian relaxed visibly. He thought he had won. He handed her the envelope.
"I noticed your Amex was... damaged yesterday," he said, a hint of accusation in his tone. "I had the bank rush a replacement. It's the Platinum card. The limit is higher."
He was trying to buy her back. He was acknowledging the broken card without admitting why she broke it.
Evelyn took the envelope. "You're too good to me," she lied.
"Make it up to you tonight?" he whispered, leaning in. "Dinner? Just us?"
Evelyn pulled away gently. "I have a migraine, Julian. Maybe tomorrow."
Julian's face fell, but he nodded. "Of course. Rest."
He left, whistling as he walked to the elevator.
As soon as the doors closed, Evelyn tossed the envelope onto the counter unopened. She went to the laundry room. She spent the next hour carefully treating the stain on Alistair's jacket with an enzymatic cleaner she had mixed herself. She steamed the wool until it looked brand new.
She placed the jacket in a garment bag. She couldn't return it in person. Not yet.
She pulled out her burner phone.
"Draft the papers," she told her lawyer. "I want them ready to file the moment I give the signal. Not a second before."
She looked at the white roses. She grabbed the vase and dumped the entire arrangement into the trash compactor. The crushing sound was satisfying.