Elena stood on the top step of the cathedral portico.
The wind whipped the rain sideways, soaking the hem of her black dress, pasting the fabric to her freezing skin. She didn't shiver. She just stared at the taillights of the black Maybach as it disappeared into the violent storm.
Sloane popped open a large black umbrella and held it over Elena's head. Sloane's hands were shaking with rage.
"He is a monster," Sloane cried, her voice cracking. "An absolute, irredeemable bastard."
Elena didn't cry. Her face was a mask of chilling calm. She raised a freezing hand and wiped the rainwater from her cheek.
She turned her head to look at Sloane.
"Sloane," Elena said, her voice raspy but entirely steady. "I need the best divorce lawyer in the city."
Sloane blinked, stunned for a fraction of a second. Then, a fierce, predatory gleam lit up her tear-filled eyes. She shoved her hand into her Birkin bag and dug around frantically.
She pulled out a thick, matte-black business card with gold foil lettering. She pressed it firmly into Elena's palm.
"Camilla Adler," Sloane said. "She's the most ruthless shark in Manhattan. She will skin him alive."
Elena closed her fist around the card. She squeezed it until the sharp, heavy cardstock dug into her skin, welcoming the sting. It kept her awake. It kept her focused.
A pre-booked black Lincoln Town Car pulled up to the curb. The driver stepped out into the rain and opened the rear door.
Sloane moved to get in, but Elena gently touched her arm.
"No," Elena said softly. "I need to do this alone right now. Thank you, Sloane."
Elena slid into the backseat. The heavy door slammed shut, instantly cutting off the roar of the storm and the chaos of the city. The silence inside the car was deafening.
She leaned her head back against the cold leather seat and closed her eyes.
Instantly, the image of her father flashed behind her eyelids. The tubes down his throat. The agonizing beep of the monitors. His chest struggling for air.
Then, the image shifted. It was Cooper's broad back, carrying Celeste out of the church, leaving her alone with a corpse.
The two images collided in her mind, sparking a fire in her gut that burned away the last remnants of her grief.
Elena's eyes snapped open. The vulnerability was gone. Only cold, calculating ice remained.
She pulled out her phone and dialed the private number on the black card.
It rang three times.
"Adler," a sharp, no-nonsense female voice answered.
"My name is Elena Brooks," Elena said, stripping away her married name without a second thought. "I want to leave Cooper Mitchell with absolutely nothing."
A low, dry chuckle echoed through the receiver.
"Bring every financial document you can get your hands on to my office tomorrow at 9 AM, Ms. Brooks," Camilla said. The line went dead.
The Lincoln pulled through the massive, wrought-iron gates of the Mitchell estate.
Elena stared out the window at the sprawling, multi-million-dollar mansion. It had been her gilded cage for three years. Her lips curled into a bitter sneer.
The car stopped. Elena stepped out, her heels clicking against the wet pavement as she walked through the grand double doors.
Martha Olsen, the head housekeeper, rushed into the foyer. Her eyes widened at Elena's soaked dress.
"Mrs. Mitchell! Where is Mr. Mitchell?" Martha asked, her brow furrowed in concern.
"He's busy taking care of someone else," Elena said flatly. "Bring a pot of hot tea to my room, Martha."
Elena didn't wait for a response. She walked up the sweeping grand staircase and pushed open the heavy mahogany doors to the master suite.
The room smelled like him. The faint, masculine scent of Tom Ford cologne clung to the air, making her stomach churn.
She walked straight into his massive walk-in closet. She bypassed the designer dresses and pulled down an old, battered suitcase from the top shelf-the one she used to use for her art supplies.
She didn't pack clothes. She walked to the hidden wall safe behind the mirror. She punched in the code.
The heavy steel door clicked open.
Elena reached inside, pulling out the thick stacks of folders. She started flipping through them.
Her hands stopped.
The deeds to the Hamptons estate and the Tribeca penthouse were gone. The documents for his primary trust fund were missing.
Elena's breathing hitched. He had already moved them. Cooper had been preparing for this. He was already hiding his assets.
She let out a dark, humorless laugh. She pulled out her phone and took high-resolution photos of the few minor subsidiary documents left behind.
She placed everything back exactly as she found it and locked the safe.
Elena walked over to the floor-to-ceiling windows. She stared out at the torrential rain battering the manicured lawns.
He thought she was stupid. He thought she was weak.
She was going to take everything.
The next morning, Elena stepped out of an unmarked Uber in the underground parking garage of a midtown Manhattan high-rise. She pulled the collar of her beige trench coat up, hiding the lower half of her face.
She stepped into the private elevator and hit the button for the 45th floor.
The glass doors of Adler Law Firm slid open. The receptionist immediately recognized her and escorted her down a quiet, minimalist hallway into a private conference room overlooking Central Park.
Five minutes later, the door swung open.
Camilla Adler walked in. She wore a razor-sharp Armani suit and Christian Louboutin heels. She didn't smile. She didn't offer a handshake.
Camilla slid a cup of black coffee across the glass table toward Elena and sat down.
"Show me what you have," Camilla demanded.
Elena unclasped her bag. She pulled out her phone and swiped to the photos she took from the safe, sliding the device across the table. Her hands were clasped tightly in her lap to hide their slight tremor.
Camilla scrolled through the images rapidly. Her sharp eyebrows drew together. She tossed the phone back onto the table with a loud clack.
"Garbage," Camilla said coldly. "These are shell companies. His core assets-the tech firm, the real estate-are shielded inside an offshore trust he set up before you signed the marriage license."
Elena's stomach plummeted. "But he founded three new subsidiaries during our marriage. Those are marital assets."
Camilla tapped her tablet, pulling up a background check. She spun the screen around.
"Look at the equity structure. They are all registered under proxy names. Legally, he owns nothing." Camilla leaned back, folding her arms. "If you file for divorce right now with these cards, you won't get a single dime. His legal team will bleed you dry in court until you can't afford to eat."
The color drained from Elena's face. Her fingernails dug into the soft flesh of her palms. The sheer, crushing weight of his wealth and power pressed down on her chest, suffocating her.
Camilla leaned forward, placing her hands flat on the glass. Her eyes were piercing.
"If you want to destroy him, you need a kill shot. I need hard, irrefutable proof of massive financial fraud, hidden asset transfers, or severe marital misconduct. And I need it documented."
Elena took a slow, shaky breath. She forced her heart rate to slow down.
"How do I get that?" Elena asked.
Camilla's lips curved into a cruel, calculating smile. "You go back to that house. You play the perfect, obedient, oblivious wife. You make him feel like a god. You make him drop his guard."
Bile rose in the back of Elena's throat. The thought of smiling at him, of letting him touch her after what he did yesterday, made her skin crawl.
But then she thought of her father's name on that medical report.
Elena's eyes hardened into chips of ice. She nodded once. "Done."
When Elena walked out of the building, the bright midday sun stung her eyes, but her mind had never been clearer.
She walked to a quiet corner on 5th Avenue and pulled out her phone. She scrolled past the contacts she had used for three years and found a number she hadn't dialed since the day she got married.
Julian Croft. The most ruthless, brilliant art dealer in the city. Her former mentor.
She pressed call.
"Well, well," Julian's booming voice echoed through the speaker. "Did the little housewife finally get bored of playing dress-up?"
"I'm ready to come back, Julian," Elena said, her voice steady.
Julian laughed, a rich, booming sound. "It's about time. You threw away your gift for a man. But the art world moves fast, darling. You've been playing house for three years. My roster is full, and I don't have time to hold your hand while you remember how to mix paint."
"I don't need you to hold my hand," Elena countered smoothly. "I saw the preview for your SoHo exhibition next month. You're anchoring it with that dreadful neo-expressionist piece by Vance. It's derivative, Julian. The gallery lighting is going to wash out the raw umber, and the critics will tear you apart for playing it safe."
Julian went completely silent on the other end of the line. She had hit a nerve.
"If you want to save that exhibition," Elena continued, her tone sharp and uncompromising, "you need a centerpiece that actually bleeds. You need 'Rose'. I need my own studio space in the back. I need a canvas. And I need an advance."
Julian let out a slow, appreciative exhale. "The art world doesn't run on charity, Elena. You want back in? You have to prove 'Rose' isn't dead. Have a concept sketch on my desk by Monday."
"It's already in my head," Elena said.
She hung up the phone. She looked at her pale reflection in the glass window of Bergdorf Goodman. She reached up and smoothed her hair.
She walked through the heavy glass doors and went straight to the La Mer counter.
She picked out the most expensive serums and creams they had. When the total rang up to over three thousand dollars, she didn't flinch.
She pulled out Cooper's American Express Black Card and handed it to the cashier.
As the machine printed the long, absurdly expensive receipt, the corners of Elena's mouth twitched upward into a cold, dead smile.
She was going to use his money to build her armor. And then she was going to gut him.
Elena grabbed the shopping bags, walked out to the curb, and hailed a yellow cab.
"Take me to the Mitchell estate," she told the driver.
The sun had set, casting long, dark shadows across the dining room of the Mitchell penthouse.
Elena sat at the end of the massive mahogany table. The crystal chandelier above cast a warm, flickering light over the silver platters. She stared down at the plate of escargot the chef had prepared, her stomach rolling with physical nausea.
The heavy front door clicked open.
Cooper walked into the foyer, shrugging off his tailored suit jacket. He looked exhausted, rubbing the back of his neck as he stepped into the dining room.
Elena took a deep breath. She smoothed the muscles in her face, forcing the coldness out of her eyes. She replaced it with a soft, slightly pathetic look of submission.
She stood up, walking over to him, and reached out to take his jacket.
Cooper flinched slightly, stepping back. He stared at her, his dark eyes scanning her face for any sign of the hysterical, screaming woman from the cathedral.
Elena lowered her eyelashes, avoiding his direct gaze.
"Dinner is getting cold," she said softly, her voice meek.
Cooper's tense shoulders instantly dropped. A wave of relief washed over his face. He let out a long breath, handing her the jacket. He thought she had broken. He thought the reality of his power had finally crushed her rebellion.
They sat at opposite ends of the long table. The only sound in the room was the sharp clink of silver forks against porcelain plates.
Cooper took a sip of his Cabernet. He looked at her, his tone dripping with arrogant condescension.
"I saw the charge on the Black Card," Cooper said smoothly. "Did you buy enough skincare? If you like it, buy more. Don't look at the price tags."
Elena sneered internally, but outwardly, she bit her lower lip, looking down at her lap like a scolded child. She nodded slowly.
She placed her fork down, her knuckles turning completely white under the table. The very thought of apologizing to the man who had stolen her father's life felt like swallowing broken glass. A wave of intense nausea twisted her stomach, and she had to dig her fingernails violently into her own palms just to keep from leaping across the table and driving her steak knife into his chest. She forced the bitter taste of bile down her throat, taking a deep breath as if gathering her courage.
"Cooper," she started, pitching her voice into a fragile, pathetic tremor she barely recognized. The words felt like poison on her tongue. "I'm sorry about yesterday. I shouldn't have cornered you at the funeral. I know... I know Daisy saved your life when you were kids. I know you have a responsibility to her."
Cooper's hand froze halfway to his mouth. A flash of genuine guilt crossed his eyes. His defenses completely crumbled.
He reached across the table, his large hand covering hers.
"I'm glad you understand, Elena," he said, his voice dropping into a gentle, patronizing purr. "You are Mrs. Mitchell. Nothing changes that."
His skin felt like a burning iron against hers. Every cell in her body screamed to pull away, to grab the steak knife and drive it through his hand.
Instead, Elena turned her hand over and gently squeezed his fingers.
"But Cooper," she murmured, looking up at him with wide, innocent eyes. "I'm going crazy sitting in this house all day. I need a distraction."
Cooper's brow furrowed slightly. The suspicion returned. "What kind of distraction?"
"Julian Croft has a gallery opening in SoHo next month," she lied effortlessly. "He asked if I could come in and help organize the guest lists. Just running errands. It would get me out of the house."
The tension vanished from Cooper's face. A gallery assistant. It was a meaningless, trivial hobby. It would keep her busy and stop her from obsessing over Celeste.
He reached into his breast pocket, pulled out the sleek metal Amex Black Card, and slid it across the polished wood toward her.
"Go," Cooper said generously. "Don't exhaust yourself. If the gallery needs a sponsorship check, tell your boss to call my assistant."
Elena stared at the black metal card. It was the key to her freedom.
"Thank you, husband," she smiled sweetly, slipping the card into her pocket.
Cooper smiled, thoroughly satisfied with his tamed pet. He stood up, walking around the table. He leaned down and pressed a dry, perfunctory kiss to the top of her head.
"I have a video conference with Tokyo," he said. "Go to sleep early."
He turned and walked down the hall. The heavy door of his study clicked shut.
The second the latch caught, the sweet, submissive smile vanished from Elena's face. Her features turned to absolute stone.
She grabbed her linen napkin and scrubbed the back of her hand where he had touched her. She rubbed the fabric against her skin so hard and so violently that a raw, red welt appeared.
She threw the napkin onto the plate.
Phase one was complete. She had her alibi. Now, she needed the ammunition.
Elena stood up, her eyes fixed on the hallway leading to the study.