The rain didn’t wash me clean; it felt like it was trying to drown me. I stumbled out of the service exit, the heavy steel door clanging shut behind me, sealing the hospital and its horrors inside. My heels clicked a frantic, uneven rhythm on the wet pavement as I put distance between myself and the people who had murdered my son. Not with a gun, but with silence. With neglect.
I didn’t go to the police. The Matthews family owned the police commissioner. I went to the only person who had never asked for a piece of my soul in exchange for his loyalty.
My fingers, numb and trembling, tapped Lachlan’s name. He answered on the first ring.
"Gen?" His voice was warm, steady—a stark contrast to the icy void opening in my chest.
"Come get me," I whispered, my voice cracking under the weight of the truth I carried. "Corner of 68th and York. Please, Lachlan. Don't ask questions. Just come."
Ten minutes later, the silver ghost of his Aston Martin pulled to the curb. Lachlan didn’t stay in the car. He was out in the rain before the engine died, his coat open, his eyes scanning the street for threats before locking onto my shivering form. He didn't say a word. he just pulled me into his chest. He smelled of cedar and safety. For a moment, I allowed myself to collapse against him, letting his heartbeat prove that life still existed somewhere.
Inside his Tribeca penthouse, the city felt miles away. Lachlan wrapped a cashmere blanket around my shoulders and pressed a glass of amber liquid into my hands. He sat on the coffee table in front of me, his knees brushing mine, his face a mask of restrained concern.
"Tell me," he said softly. Not a command, but an invitation.
"They swapped them, Lachlan." I stared into the fire, watching the flames lick the air. "Collin isn't mine. He’s Isabela’s. My son... my Rhys..." The glass in my hand shook, the ice clinking a frantic tune. "They sent him away. He died alone in a foster home while I was buying designer onesies for his replacement."
Lachlan went still. The air in the room grew heavy, charged with a sudden, violent pressure. His jaw set hard enough to snap bone. He didn't offer empty platitudes. He didn't tell me it would be okay. He reached out, covering my freezing hands with his own, his grip tight.
"Name the price, Gen," he said, his voice low and dangerous, a predator waking up. "I will burn their world down to the ash. Just say the word."
I looked at him, really looked at him, and saw the ferocity behind the gentle brown eyes I’d known since childhood. "I don't just want them hurt, Lachlan. I want them obliterated. I want them to lose everything before they realize they've lost anything."
"Then we start tonight."
But to destroy a fortress, you have to be inside the walls.
Returning to the Matthews penthouse felt like walking into a mausoleum. I paused outside the heavy oak doors, checking my reflection in the hallway mirror. My eyes were red-rimmed, my skin pale. Perfect. I looked like a grieving mother who had just learned she wasn't a biological match for her son. That was the lie I would wear like armor.
Valentino was in the library, nursing a scotch. He looked up as I entered, his expression shifting from annoyance to performance-grade concern. "Genevieve? Where the hell have you been? The hospital said you vanished."
"I couldn't breathe," I lied, my voice hollow. "Dr. Chen told me I wasn't a match. I just... I needed to walk."
He bought it. Of course he did. He thought I was fragile. He crossed the room and kissed my forehead, his lips feeling like a brand. "It’s okay, darling. We’ll find another donor. Money solves these things."
I pulled away, feigning exhaustion, and went to Collin’s room. The boy—Isabela’s boy—was asleep, his pale face illuminated by the glow of a nightlight. He looked so small in the king-sized bed. My heart lurched, a sickening collision of instinct and revulsion. I had loved him for ten years. I had kissed his scraped knees and chased away his nightmares.
But as I looked at the curve of his nose, the shape of his chin, the illusion shattered. I saw Isabela. I saw the thief who had lived in luxury while Rhys rotted in the cold. A wave of nausea rolled through me. I backed out of the room, my hand over my mouth, suffocating on the toxicity of this lie.
Two hours later, I was in the guest suite, the door locked. Lachlan had moved fast. A secure laptop sat on the desk, the screen glowing with a video link to a man with sharp eyes and a scar running through his eyebrow.
"Mrs. Matthews," Marcus Rodriguez said, his voice gravelly. "Lachlan filled me in. I’m sorry."
"Don't be sorry, Mr. Rodriguez. Be efficient."
"We’re already into the Matthews Enterprise servers," Marcus said, typing as he spoke. "But the personal stuff? That’s harder. However, we found a recurring payment from a shell company linked to Isabela. It pays for a storage unit in Queens, but also... a safe installation company."
"A safe?" I leaned in.
"Hidden wall unit. Installed five years ago in the guest wing of your penthouse. The invoice notes 'biometric and key override.' She’s hiding something physical, Mrs. Matthews. Paper trails are good, but physical evidence is better."
I glanced toward the wall that separated me from the rest of the apartment—from the husband who betrayed me and the woman who stole my life. They thought I was broken. They thought I was mourning a failed medical test.
"Find me the override code," I whispered to the screen, my reflection ghosting over the data streams. "I’m going to open it."
The crystal chandeliers of the Pierre Hotel ballroom didn’t sparkle; they glared. Beneath them, Manhattan’s elite moved like sharks in a tank of champagne and silk, their laughter sharp enough to draw blood. I stood by a pillar, clutching a glass of sparkling water I had no intention of drinking, watching my husband charm a senator while his mistress watched me.
Isabela wore blood-red satin, a deliberate contrast to my pale silver gown. She glided through the crowd, her hand lingering on Valentino’s arm a fraction too long, a territorial mark invisible to everyone but me. I felt the weight of the secret I carried—the knowledge of Rhys’s cold, lonely death—pressing against my ribs like an iron band.
"You look tired, Genevieve," Isabela purred, materializing at my elbow. Her perfume was heavy, jasmine rotting in the heat. "Perhaps the stress of the donor incompatibility is getting to you?"
"I’m perfectly fine, Isabela," I said, my voice steady despite the bile rising in my throat. "Just admiring the view."
"It is a beautiful night." She smirked, her eyes darting to my clutch. She stumbled slightly, bracing herself against me, her fingers brushing the clasp of my bag. "Oh! Clumsy me. Too much vintage Krug."
She pulled away before I could recoil. Moments later, a piercing cry cut through the ambient hum of the string quartet.
"My necklace!" Isabela’s hands flew to her bare throat. "The Emerald Tear! It’s gone!"
The room went dead silent. The Emerald Tear was a Matthews family heirloom, worth more than the building we were standing in.
Valentino was at her side instantly, his face a mask of practiced concern. "Are you sure, Bella? check the floor."
"I had it a moment ago!" Isabela sobbed, a performance worthy of Broadway. Her gaze snapped to me, wide and accusing. "I... I only bumped into Genevieve."
The accusation hung in the air, toxic and heavy. The cameras flashed, a strobe light of impending disaster.
"Don't be ridiculous," I said, the words tasting like ash. "I haven't touched you."
Valentino turned to me. There was no warmth in his eyes, only the cold calculation of a man protecting his assets. "Genevieve. Give me your bag."
My heart hammered against my sternum. "Excuse me?"
"If you didn't take it, you have nothing to fear," he said, his voice carrying to the back of the room. "Security!"
Two burly men in dark suits stepped forward. The humiliation was a physical blow, a slap across the face that left my skin burning. "Valentino, this is insane. I am your wife."
"And that is my family's legacy," he snapped. He snatched the silver clutch from my hands and upended it over a cocktail table.
Lipstick, a compact, my phone... and a heavy, green coil of emeralds and diamonds clattered onto the glass surface.
A collective gasp sucked the oxygen out of the room. The flashes went wild, blinding me. I stared at the necklace, my mind racing. She must have slipped it in when she stumbled. It was a setup so crude, so obvious, yet in this shark tank, truth didn't matter. Only optics did.
Valentino looked at me with a sneer that shattered the last fragile remnant of the love I had once borne him. "You're sick, Genevieve," he hissed, loud enough for the press to hear. "Stealing from family? Because you couldn't be the donor? Is this how you beg for attention?"
I didn't cry. Tears were for people who still had hope. I straightened my spine, feeling the steel reinforce my bones. I looked him dead in the eye. "Remember this moment, Valentino."
He turned his back on me to comfort the weeping, triumphant Isabela.
***
The next morning, the sunlight in Valentino's corner office was aggressive, illuminating the dust motes dancing over his mahogany desk. He didn't look up from his tablet when I walked in. The headlines were likely already dissecting my "mental breakdown."
I didn't sit. I walked to the edge of his desk and slammed a thick manila envelope onto the polished wood. The sound was like a gunshot.
Valentino finally looked up, an amused quirk at the corner of his mouth. "More drama, Genevieve? I have a board meeting in ten minutes."
"Divorce papers," I said, my voice devoid of tremor. "Irreconcilable differences. I want nothing but my freedom."
He laughed—a rich, baritone sound that used to make my stomach flutter. Now, it just made me want to retch. He picked up the document, scanning the header, and then, with deliberate slowness, tore the papers in half. Then in quarters.
He let the confetti rain down onto the desk.
"You don't get to walk away, Gen," he said, leaning back in his leather chair, the picture of arrogance. "You’re my wife. You stay until I say we’re done. Remember my vow? 'If I ever hurt you, I'd let you go'?"
He stood up, looming over the desk, his shadow stretching over me. "I lied. You belong to me. Now go home, take a Xanax, and stop embarrassing this family. Or I’ll have you committed."
I looked at the shredded paper, then at the man who had murdered my son and buried my heart. He thought he had won. He thought I was trapped.
He had no idea that he had just signed his own death warrant.
"As you wish, Valentino," I whispered, turning on my heel. "As you wish."