Chapter 2

The velvet box seemed to pulse in the candlelight, drawing every eye in the room like a magnet. My breath caught in my throat as Lucas opened it with deliberate ceremony, revealing not a ring, but something that made my blood turn to ice.

A ruby necklace.

Not just any ruby necklace—the one I'd admired in Tiffany's window three months ago during our anniversary shopping trip. The one I'd stopped to look at, pressing my nose against the glass like a child at a candy store.

"Oh, Lucas," I'd whispered that day, "it's beautiful. The way the rubies catch the light—like drops of wine."

He'd barely glanced at it then, tugging me away with an impatient, "It's overpriced. Come on."

But now, here it was, gleaming against black velvet like a accusation.

"Bella," Lucas said, his voice warm with affection I hadn't heard in months, "this is for you. A little Christmas gift for someone who's always been like family."

Like family. The words twisted in my stomach.

Bella's hand flew to her throat, her eyes wide with perfectly performed surprise. "Lucas, I can't possibly—"

"I insist." He stood, moving behind her chair with the fluid grace that had once made my heart race. "You've always had such elegant taste. This will look perfect on you."

I watched, paralyzed, as he lifted the necklace from its velvet nest. The rubies caught the candlelight, throwing crimson reflections across the white tablecloth like scattered drops of blood. My blood, it felt like.

Bella lifted her golden hair with one manicured hand, exposing the graceful curve of her neck. Lucas fastened the clasp with practiced ease, his fingers lingering a moment too long on her skin.

"There," he murmured, his voice intimate in a way that made my chest constrict. "Perfect."

Bella's hand went to the necklace, her fingers tracing the stones with reverent delicacy. The rubies nestled against her collarbone like they belonged there, like they'd been waiting their whole existence for her elegant throat.

"It's stunning," Mother Helen breathed, her approval radiating across the table. "Absolutely stunning. Don't you think so, Clara?"

All eyes turned to me. I sat frozen, my hands still gripping my napkin so tightly my knuckles had gone white. The turkey grew cold on its platter, the careful meal I'd spent two days preparing forgotten in the wake of this moment.

"Clara?" Lucas's voice held a note of impatience, as if I were a slow child failing to appreciate a magic trick.

Bella turned to face me fully, and I saw it—the triumph glittering in her eyes brighter than any ruby. Her smile was sweet as poison, her head tilted in mock concern.

"Are you alright, dear?" she asked, her voice dripping with false sympathy. "You look a little pale."

The necklace caught the light again as she moved, and I felt something break inside my chest. Not just my heart—something deeper. Something that had been holding me together for months.

"It's lovely," I managed, my voice barely above a whisper.

Lucas returned to his seat, satisfaction radiating from him like heat from a fire. He began carving the turkey again, the knife sliding through the meat I'd so carefully prepared. "I'm glad you approve. Bella deserves beautiful things."

The casual cruelty of it stole my breath. I'd admired that necklace. I'd stood there like a fool, dreaming of how it might feel against my own skin, imagining Lucas surprising me with it for our anniversary or Christmas. Instead, he'd remembered my admiration only to bestow it on another woman.

"Actually," Lucas said suddenly, setting down the carving knife again, "speaking of gifts..."

He reached into his jacket and pulled out a crumpled brown envelope—the kind used for overnight delivery. My name was scrawled across it in his sharp handwriting.

"For you, Clara." He tossed it across the table like an afterthought. The envelope landed beside my untouched plate with a soft thud.

My hands trembled as I picked it up, the paper crackling under my fingers. Inside, I felt the rustle of fabric and the stiff edge of documents.

I pulled out an apron first—cheap polyester printed with cheerful red letters: "World's Best Housekeeper!" The fabric felt rough against my fingers, nothing like the soft cotton of the apron I wore now, stained with evidence of my love.

Beneath the apron lay a sheaf of papers. Legal documents. The letterhead swam before my eyes, but the words at the top were clear enough: "Petition for Dissolution of Marriage."

"Sign them," Lucas said, his voice casual as if he were asking me to pass the salt. He speared a piece of turkey with his fork, chewing thoughtfully. "Bella's pregnant."

The words hit me like a physical blow. The dining room tilted, the candles blurring into streaks of light.

"Pregnant," I repeated, the word foreign on my tongue.

Bella's hand moved to her still-flat stomach, her smile radiant. "We wanted to tell you together. It's early still, but..."

"I need to give the child a proper name," Lucas continued, cutting another piece of meat. "A legitimate family. You understand."

I stared at the papers in my hands, the legal language swimming before my eyes. Five years of marriage reduced to clauses about asset division and irreconcilable differences.

"The apron suits you," Lucas added, gesturing with his fork. "You can come back as a housekeeper if you want. You're good at it, and we'll need the help with the baby."

Mother Helen nodded approvingly. "Very practical. Clara does have a talent for domestic work."

Bella touched the ruby necklace again, the gesture deliberate. "We'd pay well, of course. And you already know how Lucas likes things done."

I looked around the table—at the perfect turkey I'd burned my fingers preparing, at the holly centerpiece I'd arranged with such care, at the faces of people I'd thought were family. The candlelight flickered across their expectant expressions, waiting for my response to their generous offer.

The apron lay across my lap like a surrender flag, its cheerful message mocking everything I'd believed about my place in this house, in this life.

"Sign them, Clara," Lucas said again, his voice edged with impatience. "Don't make this harder than it needs to be."

Chapter 3

The silence stretched across the dining room like a taut wire, waiting to snap.

I stared down at the apron in my lap—that cheerful, mocking piece of polyester with its insulting message. The divorce papers rustled beneath it, Lucas's signature already there, bold and decisive. All that remained was my capitulation.

"Clara?" Lucas's voice held that edge of impatience I'd grown so familiar with. "We're waiting."

I looked up at their faces—Lucas with his fork poised over the turkey I'd burned my fingers preparing, Bella touching that ruby necklace like a talisman, Mother Helen's disapproving scowl. They expected tears. They expected begging. They expected me to crumble like the overpriced pastries Lucas used to bring home from his business lunches.

Instead, I felt something cold and sharp crystallize in my chest.

I stood slowly, the apron sliding from my lap to the floor. The candlelight flickered across the table, casting dancing shadows on their expectant faces.

"You know what?" I said, my voice surprisingly steady. "You're absolutely right."

I reached for the nearest candlestick—a heavy silver piece that had been Lucas's grandmother's. The flame danced at the tip, eager and hungry.

"Clara, what are you—" Lucas started.

I bent down, touching the candle flame to the polyester apron. The fabric caught instantly, the synthetic material curling and blackening with a satisfying hiss. The smell of burning plastic filled the air, acrid and sharp.

"Clara!" Mother Helen shrieked.

I walked to the fireplace—the one that hadn't been cleaned in months because Lucas always complained about the mess of ash, the one filled with old newspapers and debris. I dropped the burning apron into it, watching as the flames leaped higher, catching the paper and sending sparks up the chimney.

The fire roared to life, casting wild shadows across the dining room walls. Orange light danced across the ruby necklace at Bella's throat, making it look like drops of blood.

"Are you insane?" Lucas was on his feet now, his chair scraping against the hardwood.

I turned back to them, the heat from the fireplace warming my back. "Probably."

I picked up the divorce papers with steady hands, smoothing them against the table's surface. The pen felt surprisingly light in my fingers as I signed my name with fluid strokes—Clara Thorne Mills. Soon to be just Clara Thorne again.

"There," I said, sliding the papers across the table to Lucas. "All done."

Bella's eyes were wide, her hand pressed to her throat. "Lucas, maybe we should call someone—"

"No need," I interrupted, pulling my phone from my pocket. The screen lit up, showing dozens of missed calls and messages I'd been ignoring while playing the perfect wife.

I scrolled through my contacts, finding the number I needed. The phone rang once before a crisp voice answered.

"Marcus, it's Clara." I kept my voice level, professional. "Activate Ice River Protocol. Withdraw all investments from Thorne Industries immediately."

"Clara, what the hell—" Lucas lunged toward me, but I stepped back, keeping the phone pressed to my ear.

"Every penny, Marcus. Liquidate everything. The merger, the expansion loans, the quarterly projections—pull it all. Tonight."

"Understood," came the reply. "Initiating full withdrawal. The automated systems will handle the transfers within the hour."

"Clara, you can't—" Lucas's face had gone white, his confident demeanor cracking like ice over deep water.

"I can," I said, ending the call. "And I just did."

The room erupted in chaos. Mother Helen was shrieking about the fire, Bella was clutching Lucas's arm, and Lucas himself stood frozen, the reality of what I'd just done written across his face in stark terror.

"Do you have any idea what you've just done?" he whispered.

I smiled, feeling lighter than I had in years. "I've given you exactly what you wanted, darling. Your freedom. Though I'm afraid it's going to cost you everything else."

The fire crackled behind me, consuming the last remnants of the cheerful apron. The smell of burnt polyester mixed with the aroma of the cooling turkey, creating something acrid and final.

"The company will survive," Lucas said, but his voice shook. "We have other investors—"

"Seventy percent of your liquid capital came from my family's trust," I said conversationally, walking toward the hall closet where I'd hung my coat hours earlier. "The rest is tied up in assets that will be frozen pending the divorce proceedings. Your lawyers will explain the details."

I pulled on my wool coat, the fabric soft and warm against my skin. Through the dining room window, I could see snow beginning to fall again, thick flakes that caught the light from the street lamps.

"Clara, wait," Bella's voice was higher now, panicked. "Surely we can work something out. The baby—"

"Will have a father who's about to learn the value of honest work," I said, buttoning my coat. "How refreshing for all of you."

Lucas stepped toward me, his hands outstretched. "Clara, please. We can discuss this. The necklace—I can return it. We can work things out."

I looked at him—really looked at him—for the first time in months. The perfect jaw, the expensive haircut, the designer clothes that I'd helped pay for. He looked smaller somehow, diminished by desperation.

"Keep the necklace," I said. "Consider it a parting gift. Though you might want to have it appraised—I suspect you'll need every penny."

I walked to the front door, my heels clicking against the hardwood floors I'd polished just that morning. Behind me, I could hear Mother Helen's continued complaints about the fire, Bella's whispered panic, and Lucas's increasingly frantic phone calls.

The door handle felt cold under my palm. I paused for just a moment, listening to the chaos I was leaving behind.

"Merry Christmas," I called out, my voice carrying over the din.

Then I stepped out into the snow, pulling the door closed behind me with a soft, final click. The night air hit my face like a blessing, clean and sharp and full of possibility.

Behind me, through the frosted windows, I could see the warm glow of the dining room where my carefully prepared Christmas dinner sat forgotten on the table. The fire I'd started flickered in the fireplace, casting dancing shadows on the walls.

I walked down the front steps and into the falling snow, each flake melting against my warm skin. My phone buzzed with incoming calls—Lucas, no doubt, or maybe his lawyers working late on Christmas Eve.

I let it ring.

The snow crunched under my feet as I walked away from the house that had been my prison, toward a future that was suddenly, brilliantly uncertain. The ruby necklace was beautiful, I had to admit.

It would look even better at auction.

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