Chapter 7

Cynthia reached the end of the long, dim corridor and pushed open the cheap wooden door to her cramped bedroom at the back of the house.

She stopped dead in her tracks. Her hand froze on the doorknob.

The room had been gutted. Violated.

The flimsy doors of her small closet hung crooked on bent hinges, ripped open with brute force. Her meager collection of clothes—faded sweaters, worn jeans, a single thrift-store dress—had been yanked from their hangers and strewn carelessly across the floor like trash. The drawers of her tiny desk were pulled out and dumped upside down, papers and pens and old photographs scattered across the rug.

Standing by the unmade bed, a smirk twisting her thin lips, was Brenda—Inger's personal maid, her loyal attack dog. In Brenda's hands, cradled with deliberate, mocking reverence, was a delicate, intricately carved antique wooden statue. Dark walnut, hand-carved, worn smooth by decades of loving touch.

It was the only thing Cynthia had left of her dead mother, Lillian.

Cynthia's blood ran cold in her veins. The temperature in the room seemed to plummet, the air turning sharp and brittle as winter ice. Her dark eyes locked onto the statue, her pupils dilating into bottomless, dangerous pools of black.

The sharp, staccato click of designer heels against the hardwood floor announced Inger's arrival like a drumroll before an execution. Her aunt strolled through the open doorway, her posture lazy and triumphant, a look of gloating malice stretched across her powdered face like a death mask.

"Looking for this?" Inger asked, gesturing with a perfectly manicured hand toward the statue nestled in Brenda's arms. Her ruby ring caught the light and threw it back in bloody sparks.

Inger walked right up to Cynthia, stopping inches from her face, her chin raised high with the arrogance of someone who believed they held all the power. Her breath smelled of mint and black tea. "You will go to the Church family tomorrow morning and call off this ridiculous engagement. You will tell Eleonora that you are unfit, that you lied, that you are nothing but a gold-digging orphan who tricked her way into their lives. And then, once the contract is ashes, you will marry the Astor boy as originally planned."

Cynthia didn't move. Didn't speak. Her breathing stayed slow, controlled, measured.

"If you don't," Inger hissed, stepping so close that Cynthia could count the broken capillaries in her aunt's nose, "I will take a hammer to that piece of junk. I'll smash it to splinters right in front of you. You will never see your worthless mother's precious heirloom again. I'll burn the pieces."

Inger expected tears. She expected begging. She expected Cynthia to collapse to her knees, sobbing, pleading, surrendering.

Instead, Cynthia took a single, slow, deliberate step forward. The sheer, concentrated intensity of her icy stare—the flat, dead eyes of someone who had nothing left to lose—made Inger's body react before her brain could catch up. She stumbled backward half a step, her heel catching on the rug, her bravado flickering.

"You are stealing the property of a dead woman to blackmail her daughter," Cynthia said, her voice eerily calm, soft as a prayer and sharp as a blade. "Aren't you afraid of karma, Inger? Of what might come back around?"

Inger threw her head back and laughed—a harsh, grating, ugly sound that scraped against the walls. "Karma? Karma! I am the lady of this house! Everything under this roof—every stick of furniture, every scrap of fabric, every worthless trinket you cling to—belongs to me. I can smash that statue to dust and sweep it into the trash, and no one will lift a finger to stop me. You are nothing but a parasite I want scraped off my shoe."

Cynthia stopped walking. Her forward momentum ceased. And then, slowly, terrifyingly, the rigid, furious line of her mouth curved upward into a chilling, blood-curdling smile that didn't touch her eyes.

A violent rush of blood surged to her head, her pulse hammering in her temples, her breath catching painfully in her throat at the desecration of her room, her things, her mother's memory. The anger threatened to blind her, to consume her, to make her do something irreversible. But the moment she caught the triumphant, gloating smile stretching across Inger's cruel face—the absolute certainty of victory—a freezing, diamond-hard wave of absolute clarity washed over her, chilling the rage into something far more dangerous.

She slipped her hand deep into the pocket of her jeans. Her thumb found the side button of her phone by touch alone.

She tapped the screen.

A voice echoed loudly from the phone's speaker—tinny but unmistakable. Inger's voice.

"If you don't, I will take a hammer to that piece of junk..."

"Everything under this roof belongs to me! I can smash that statue to dust..."

"...you are nothing but a parasite I want gone!"

Inger's arrogant, gloating laugh died in her throat like a snuffed candle. The color drained from her face so fast it looked like a special effect—from flushed pink to corpse-gray in the space of a heartbeat. She stared at the black rectangle in Cynthia's hand with naked, undiluted horror, her jaw going slack.

"Give me that!" Inger shrieked, her composure shattering like glass. She lunged forward, her manicured claws outstretched, her face contorted into a mask of animal desperation.

Cynthia sidestepped the clumsy, grasping attack with the ease of someone dodging a falling leaf. She grabbed Inger's wrist in mid-air, twisted it sharply at the joint—just enough to send a bolt of pain shooting up her forearm—and shoved her backward with controlled, contemptuous force. Inger's heels tangled in the rug, and she crashed backward onto the mattress, bouncing once, her arms flailing, her dignity shattered.

Cynthia stood over her, casting a long, dark shadow across the bed. She held up the phone, the screen still glowing. "Three minutes of crystal-clear audio," she said, her voice dropping to a lethal, barely audible whisper. "Extortion. Grand larceny. Blackmail. I wonder how the NYPD would handle this evidence. Or better yet..." She tilted her head, her smile turning razor-sharp. "The New York Post. 'Long Island Socialite Blackmails Orphan Niece With Dead Mother's Heirloom.' Front page. Your photo. Your name. Your reputation at the country club would be dead by lunchtime."

Inger trembled violently on the bed, her chest heaving, her eyes wide and wet with genuine, unadulterated terror. The threat of public humiliation—of being dragged through the tabloid mud—was a knife pressed directly against her carotid artery. Everything she had built, every invitation, every social connection, would evaporate overnight.

Cynthia slowly turned her head and locked eyes with Brenda, who was shaking like a leaf in a hurricane, the wooden statue trembling in her numb fingers.

"Put it down," Cynthia commanded. Her voice was soft. It was terrifying.

Brenda nearly dropped the statue in her frantic haste to place it gently, reverently, on the nightstand. She backed away with her hands raised, her face pale as milk.

"Get out," Cynthia hissed, the words laced with ice.

Inger scrambled off the bed, her expensive heels skidding on the hardwood, her lacquered hair coming unpinned. She shot Cynthia a look of pure, venomous, undiluted hatred—a promise of future retribution—but she didn't dare open her mouth. She fled the room, Brenda scurrying at her heels like a frightened rat.

Cynthia walked to the door and turned the lock with a decisive click. She crossed to the nightstand and picked up the wooden statue with both hands, cradling it against her chest. Her thumb gently, tenderly brushed away a single speck of dust from the carved face. For a fraction of a heartbeat, her cold, hard eyes softened with a grief so deep it threatened to swallow her whole. She blinked it away.

She pulled out her phone and tapped the screen, uploading the audio file to an encrypted cloud server with triple redundancy. The war in this house had just escalated to a new level. And she intended to win.

Chapter 8

A few days later, the oppressive, humid heat of the afternoon sun baked the glass roof of the greenhouse until the air inside shimmered.

Cynthia stood at the scarred wooden worktable, her hands moving in a steady, rhythmic rhythm as she crushed dried, woody roots with a heavy stone pestle. A thin, glistening layer of sweat coated her forehead, plastering stray dark hairs to her temples and the nape of her neck. The bitter, earthy, medicinal smell of the crushed herbs hung thick in the damp, still air, coating her tongue.

Suddenly, the deep, rumbling growl of heavy diesel engines shattered the quiet of the estate like a rock through a stained-glass window.

Cynthia's hands paused. The pestle hovered in mid-air, dripping dark liquid. The noise was coming from next door—from the massive, ultra-luxurious Hamptons estate that had sat empty and silent for over six months, its windows dark, its gates chained.

She wiped her stained hands on her apron, leaving dark smears on the canvas, and pushed open the greenhouse door. The blast of hot, humid air hit her face as she crossed the sun-scorched lawn, her sneakers leaving faint prints in the parched grass. The two properties were separated by a towering, twelve-foot hedge of thick, dark green leaves—an impenetrable wall of foliage.

Cynthia approached the boundary and carefully, silently parted the dense leaves with her fingers, creating a narrow gap just wide enough to peer through.

On the other side, a small fleet of moving trucks was parked haphazardly in the sweeping circular driveway. Men in matching gray uniforms swarmed like ants, carefully unloading massive pieces of custom Italian furniture wrapped in padded blankets. A gleaming black grand piano was being wheeled up a ramp. Crystal chandeliers in protective crates. Boxes upon boxes of God-knows-what.

A sleek black Maybach with dark-tinted windows glided up the long driveway, coming to a smooth, silent stop beside the ornate marble fountain—now flowing with water for the first time in months.

The driver's door opened. Leo got out and opened the rear passenger door.

Dominic stepped out into the blistering sunlight.

He was wearing a charcoal gray suit that probably cost more than Cynthia's entire education, his white shirt crisp and open at the collar. But his face was a thunderstorm. The dark, oppressive, seething aura radiating from him was so intense it seemed to physically darken the air around him. His jaw was clenched. His shoulders were rigid. His eyes blazed with barely controlled fury.

Leo hurried around the car, clutching a tablet to his chest like a shield, his face pale and sweating. "Sir," he stammered, loud enough for Cynthia to hear through the hedge, "the matriarch paid three times the market value. In cash. Wired this morning. The deed is already transferred to your name. She said... she said if you don't live here for the next thirty days to build a relationship with your fiancée, she will go on a hunger strike. A public one. With press coverage."

Dominic grabbed his silk tie and yanked it loose with a violent, strangling motion, the fabric hissing against his collar. He ripped the top button of his shirt open, his chest heaving with suppressed, volcanic rage. Trapped. He was trapped by an eighty-year-old woman's emotional blackmail.

He turned his head in frustration, his dark eyes scanning the property line like he was looking for something to destroy.

Through the small gap in the hedge, his eyes locked directly onto Cynthia's.

The air between them seemed to crackle and hiss with invisible static electricity.

Cynthia's eyes flew wide in genuine shock. Her stomach performed a slow, nauseating, uncomfortable flip. He lives here now? Next door? Thirty days of this?

Dominic's shock lasted half a second before it curdled into absolute, venomous disgust. He took in her stained apron, the sweat glistening on her face, the way she was hunched over and spying on him through the bushes like a common voyeur.

He marched across the freshly trimmed grass, his long legs eating up the distance, and stopped directly on the other side of the hedge. He towered over her even through the barrier, his shadow falling across her face. His lip curled into a sneer so sharp it could have cut glass.

"You really don't waste any time, do you?" Dominic snarled, his voice dripping with contempt so thick it was practically viscous. "What did you do—call my grandmother the second I left? Cry into the phone about how much you missed me? Tell her you couldn't bear to be apart from your precious fiancé?" He leaned closer, his voice dropping to a venomous hiss. "Is this your pathetic, desperate attempt to climb into my bed by moving me next door?"

Cynthia let the branches fall back into place, but he was so close she could still see the furious, pulsing vein in his neck through the leaves. The sheer, staggering audacity of his accusation—the ego required to believe she would orchestrate all of this just to get near him—left her momentarily, genuinely speechless.

She rolled her eyes so hard they ached in their sockets. "You have a severe, clinical persecution complex," she shot back, her voice dripping with acidic sarcasm. "I would rather sleep in a dumpster behind a fish market than share a zip code with you. This is my personal nightmare."

She made a dramatic show of raising her hand and waving the air in front of her nose, her face twisting into an expression of exaggerated disgust. "The air over here is already starting to smell like arrogant billionaire. It's polluting my herbs. I'm going to have to throw out the whole batch."

Dominic's fists clenched at his sides. His knuckles popped—one, two, three—loud and sharp in the quiet afternoon air. He looked like he wanted to rip the entire hedge out of the ground with his bare hands, roots and all.

Leo stood frozen in the background, sweating so profusely his shirt was soaked through, praying to every god he could name that his boss wouldn't commit a violent felony on the front lawn of his new house.

Cynthia didn't give him a chance to respond. She turned her back on him with deliberate, insulting casualness and marched straight back to the greenhouse. The glass door slammed shut behind her with a sharp, final crack.

Dominic stared at the empty space where she had stood, his chest heaving, his breath ragged. The paranoid voices in his skull whispered their dark, poisonous warnings. She's lying. She planned this. She's playing you.

He spun around to face Leo, his eyes cold and flat and utterly merciless. "Install military-grade infrared cameras along this entire perimeter. Tonight. Motion sensors. Heat signatures. If that woman so much as sets one toe onto my property, I want to know about it in real time."

Leo gulped audibly, his Adam's apple bobbing. "Yes, sir. Immediately, sir."

The war had officially relocated to the suburbs. And the opening salvo had just been fired.

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