Chapter 4

I didn't go to the lake house. Instead, I drove back to the estate.

I needed to say goodbye to the mausoleum I had built before I burned my entire life to the ground.

It stood perched on a cliff overlooking the churning Atlantic.

Gray stone, massive windows, sharp, unforgiving angles.

It was beautiful, imposing, and cold. Just like my marriage.

I walked along the precipice.

The wind whipped my hair across my face, stinging my skin.

My ribs still throbbed-a dull, persistent ache from the fall at the casino.

My phone rang, vibrating against my hip.

It was a blocked number.

I answered, bracing myself.

"You're still here?"

It was Hayden. Her voice was sugary sweet, an affectation that barely masked the poison beneath.

"Enjoying the house?" I asked, keeping my voice steady.

"It's a bit... drafty," she laughed lightly. "Emilio says we can remodel. He wants a playroom for Leo."

"He can build it on my grave," I snapped.

"That's the plan, honey," she purred.

The line went dead.

I frowned, lowering the phone.

Then, I heard the distinct crunch of gravel behind me.

I turned around.

Two men were striding toward me.

They wore ill-fitting black suits and bore no family crests.

They weren't Emilio's personal guard.

They were freelancers. Cheap muscle.

"Mrs. Thomas," one of them said. A jagged scar ran down his cheek, pulling his lip into a permanent sneer.

"Who sent you?" I asked, though the answer was already cold in my gut.

"Hayden sends her regards," the other one said.

They didn't draw guns.

They just kept walking toward me, their steady pace forcing me back toward the jagged edge.

"Emilio will kill you," I warned. It was a bluff. I wasn't sure if he would even care.

"The Don is busy," Scarface grinned, his eyes dead. "He thinks you're unstable. Depressed about the baby."

"A tragic suicide," the other one mocked. "Very romantic."

I took a step back.

My heel caught on a protruding root.

I stumbled, my balance failing.

They lunged.

Rough hands shoved my chest.

Hard.

The sensation was a violent echo of the casino.

But this time, there was no glass wall to stop me.

There was only air.

I fell backward into the void.

The sky spun dizzyingly above me.

I saw their faces peering over the edge, shrinking away.

I didn't scream.

I thought of Emilio.

I thought of the moment his hands had been on me.

He pushed me away then, and his mistress was pushing me away now.

It was poetic. Cruel, but poetic.

I hit the water.

It was like slamming into concrete.

Cold darkness swallowed me instantly.

The current seized me, dragging me down, smashing my body against the submerged rocks.

Pain flared white-hot in my shoulder, my leg.

I held my breath until my lungs burned.

I let the current take me.

I didn't fight.

I needed them to think I was dead.

I washed up a mile down the coast.

I coughed up saltwater and blood, shivering violently.

My leg was broken. Agony shot through me as I dragged myself across the sharp rocks.

A truck was parked near the treeline.

A Park Ranger logo was emblazoned on the door.

An old man and a young woman were sitting on the tailgate, eating sandwiches.

They saw me.

They dropped their food and sprinted over.

"Help," I croaked, my throat raw.

"Call an ambulance!" the woman shouted to her father.

"No," I gasped, grabbing her wrist. My grip was weak, trembling. "No police. No hospitals."

The old man looked at my mottled bruises. He looked at the expensive, torn ruins of my dress.

He knew trouble when he saw it.

"Please," I whispered, darkness encroaching on my vision. "I'm already dead."

Blackness took me again.

When I woke up, I was in a cabin.

It smelled of pine needles and woodsmoke.

My leg was splinted and elevated.

The young woman was wiping my forehead with a cool cloth.

"You were out for two days," she said.

"Did you call anyone?" I asked, panic rising.

"No. My dad said you looked like you were running from the devil."

"Something like that," I murmured.

I borrowed her phone.

I dialed a number I had memorized long ago.

Ayla picked up on the first ring.

"Hello?"

"It's me," I said.

Silence.

Then, a choked sob. "Elana? They found a shoe. They said... Emilio is burying an empty casket tomorrow."

"Let him bury it," I said, my voice void of emotion.

"I need cash, Ayla. And I need a passport."

"Where are you going?"

"Zurich," I said. "I'm going to take back the life I left behind."

"Emilio is tearing the city apart looking for answers," she whispered, her voice trembling. "He killed the men Hayden hired. He... he looks broken, Elana."

"Good," I said, letting the ice fill my veins.

"Let him break."

Chapter 5

Elana POV

"You look like a ghost," Ayla whispered, her eyes scanning my face as if searching for the woman I used to be.

We met in the back booth of a roadside diner, three towns past the border. The lighting was dim, the air smelling of stale coffee and grease-perfect anonymity.

I pulled my hoodie tighter and adjusted my sunglasses. My leg throbbed inside its brace, a constant, grounding rhythm of pain.

"I feel like one," I murmured.

She checked the room once more before sliding a thick, manila envelope across the scratched table.

"Cash. A Swiss passport. The name is Elena Rossi," Ayla explained, keeping her voice low. "Close enough to your own so you won't hesitate when called, but different enough to clear customs without triggering a flag."

"Thank you," I said, tucking the envelope into my jacket.

"Emilio transferred ten million dollars into a trust in your name yesterday," Ayla added, watching me closely. "He calls it the 'Memorial Fund'."

"Blood money," I scoffed, a bitter taste rising in my throat. "He's trying to purchase a clear conscience."

"It isn't working," Ayla said grimly. "He looks like hell, Elana. He hasn't shaved in a week. He drinks until he passes out on the floor of your office, surrounded by your things."

"Does he know it was Hayden?"

"He suspects. The paranoia is eating him alive, but he has no proof yet. She covered her tracks well."

"She will slip up," I said, my voice cold. "Greed makes people sloppy."

Ayla reached into her bag and pulled out another document, sliding it toward me.

"This is the deed to the penthouse. He put it in your name before the funeral. He kicked Hayden out the night you... disappeared."

I stared at the paper. It represented a cage, not a home.

"I don't want it," I said, pushing it back. "I don't want anything from him."

"Take it," Ayla insisted, her tone urgent. "Sell it. Burn it. Whatever. It's not just a deed, Elana. It's leverage. It's power."

I shook my head. I didn't want his money. I wanted his ruin.

"I need you to do something for me instead," I said.

I reached into my pocket and handed her a small, silver flash drive.

"What is this?"

"Blueprints," I answered. "For the casino. For the central warehouses. For the estate itself."

"And?"

"And the structural weaknesses I built into every single one of them," I said softly. "Just in case."

Ayla's eyes went wide, the realization dawning on her.

"You were planning this?"

"I was protecting myself," I corrected. "The Omertà goes both ways, Ayla. If he breaks his vow, I break his walls."

She closed her hand over the drive, her knuckles white.

"What do you want me to do with it?"

"Keep it safe. Buried deep. When the time is right... leak it to the Commission. Leak it to his enemies."

"That will destroy him," Ayla whispered, fear and awe mingling in her voice.

"He destroyed me first," I said.

I stood up, wincing as my weight settled onto my bad leg. The pain was sharp, but it was mine. It was real.

"I'm leaving tonight," I said.

"Elana," Ayla grabbed my hand across the table, her grip desperate. "If you go, you can never come back. If he finds out you're alive..."

"He won't," I promised. "Because Elana Thomas is dead. She died on those rocks."

I pulled my hand away and walked out of the diner, leaving the ghost of my past in the booth.

I drove the Ranger's truck to the perimeter of the old estate one last time.

I parked in the shadows, watching from a distance.

I saw thin gray smoke rising from the chimney. Emilio was in there.

Probably mourning the idea of me, while ignoring the brutal reality of what his negligence had caused.

I reached into my bag and pulled out the blueprints. Not the digital ones I gave Ayla, but the original hand-drawn sketches of our dream home. The lines I had drawn when I still believed in fairy tales.

I struck a match. The flame flared, bright and hungry against the twilight.

I watched the paper curl and blacken. The fire licked at the lines I had drawn with so much love, turning memory into ash.

It felt cleansing. Essential.

My phone buzzed in my lap. A news alert.

Don Emilio Thomas under investigation by The Commission following wife's tragic death.

The sharks were circling. He was weak. Distracted. Vulnerable.

Good luck, Emilio.

I threw the burning paper onto the patch of dry grass near the gate. It wouldn't burn the house down. It would just singe the hedge. A mark. A warning.

I turned my back on the rising smoke.

I got back in the truck and put it in gear.

"To the airport," I told myself aloud, testing the sound of my new voice.

"To Zurich."

"To Ansel Acosta."

I didn't know Ansel yet. But I knew of him.

The neutral architect. The man who built empires without getting blood on his drafting table.

He was my ticket back to the world of the living.

And he was going to help me become the Queen I was always meant to be.

Goodbye, Mob Wife.

Hello, Nemesis.

Chapter 6

Emilio POV

The Commission does not ask nicely.

They do not send emails, and they certainly do not make phone calls.

Instead, they send a single, dead canary in a box to my office.

It was a message, brutal and unambiguous: Sing, or die.

Elana's "suicide" was drawing too much heat. The police were asking questions. The press was digging. My enemies were smelling blood in the water.

I needed to close the loop.

I sat behind my mahogany desk, the wood cool under my fingertips, grounding me.

Hayden sat across from me.

She was nursing my scotch. She had her feet up on the chair where Elana used to sit, claiming the space with an arrogance that made my skin crawl.

She looked comfortable.

Too comfortable.

"The police are calling it a tragedy," she said, swirling the amber liquid against the crystal. "They say she was unstable. Post-partum depression, maybe? Even though there was no baby."

She giggled.

The sound grated on my nerves like sandpaper on bone.

"Ayla tells me you were busy the day Elana died," I said. My voice was low, devoid of inflection.

Hayden froze. The glass stopped halfway to her lips.

"I was shopping," she said. "For Leo."

"Ayla says you withdrew fifty thousand dollars in cash."

"So? I like to spend money. Your money."

"She also says you met with two men near the docks. Freelancers. The kind who don't ask questions."

Hayden set the glass down. It made a sharp clink on the wood.

She stood up and walked around the desk, her hips swaying with assumed victory. She put her hands on my shoulders.

"Emilio," she purred. "Does it matter? She's gone. We won."

"Did you kill her?" I asked.

I didn't feel anger. Not yet. I just felt a cold, clinical need for the truth.

Hayden sighed. She looked at me with wide, innocent eyes.

"I did it for us," she said.

The air seemed to vanish from the room.

"I did it for Leo," she continued, her voice gaining confidence. "She was a threat. She was going to leave you. She was going to take half your empire. I just... gave her a push. Literally."

She smiled. She actually smiled.

"I saved you, baby. I cleaned up your mess."

My stomach turned over.

It wasn't love. It wasn't loyalty.

It was a power play.

She hadn't killed Elana to protect me. She had killed Elana to replace her.

And in that moment, I saw the truth I had been ignoring for years.

I looked at Hayden's face, distorted by greed and ambition, and I saw my own reflection.

I had created this monster.

I had fed it with diamonds and lies.

"You broke the code," I said. "You touched a Made Man's wife."

Hayden laughed. "She wasn't a wife. She was a decoration. And now she's fish food."

I stood up.

I didn't yell. I didn't throw things.

I just reached under the lip of the desk and peeled free the suppressed pistol I kept taped against the wood.

Hayden's smile vanished.

"Emilio?"

"You're right," I said. "I need to clean up my mess."

"Emilio, wait! I love you! I gave you a son!"

"You gave me a headache," I said.

I didn't hesitate.

I pulled the trigger.

One shot. Clean. Center of the forehead.

She dropped to the floor like a marionette with cut strings. The expensive Persian rug soaked up the blood instantly.

I looked down at her.

I felt nothing for her.

But for Elana?

A sharp, jagged shard of pain ripped through my chest.

Hayden pushed her off the cliff.

But I was the one who drove her to the edge.

I sat back down.

I pressed the intercom button.

"Send the cleaners," I said. "And get rid of everything she ever touched."

Chapters
Customize
Next Chapter
Minishorts Logo
Enjoy full short drama episodes, No waiting, watch now!
MiniShorts Youtube
PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
About us
support@minishorts.com
©2026 MiniShorts All Rights Reserved. CHASINGTOP HK LIMITED