Chapter 3

The morning after the divorce felt like waking up in a body that didn't belong to me. My eyes were crusty, my throat was parched, and for a terrifying five seconds, I forgot everything. Then, I saw the empty space on my ring finger-a pale line of skin where my wedding band used to sit-and the weight of Julian's betrayal crashed back down, suffocating me.

I didn't have time to mourn. Not yet. I had exactly eight hundred dollars in my checking account and a mountain of student loans that Julian had "generously" stopped paying the moment I signed those papers.

I spent three hours perfecting my resume, removing any mention of the "private consulting" I'd done for Vane Group. I was a top graduate of St. Jude's Academy. I was a scholarship kid who had fought for every inch of my education. Surely, that counted for something.The first interview was at Loring & Associates, a prestigious firm in the heart of the financial district. The lobby was all marble and glass, smelling of expensive lilies and success.

"Miss Thorne? Mr. Henderson will see you now," the receptionist said with a polite smile.

For twenty minutes, the interview was a dream. Henderson was impressed. "Your analysis of the tech-sector volatility is some of the sharpest I've seen from someone your age," he said, leaning back in his leather chair. "I think you'd be a perfect fit for our junior associate program. Let's just get your ID on file for the formal background check."

I handed over my driver's license, my heart fluttering with a tiny spark of hope.

Henderson scanned the ID. He looked at his computer screen. Then, the smile vanished.It didn't just fade; it died. He looked at the phone on his desk, which had just blinked with a silent notification.

"I'm sorry," he said, his voice suddenly sounding like he was reciting a funeral dirge. "There's been an error. This position was actually filled... five minutes ago. Internally."

"Five minutes ago?" I echoed, my voice small. "But you just said-"

"I'm busy, Miss Thorne. Please show yourself out."

The same thing happened at the second firm. And the third. By 4:00 PM, the pattern was undeniable. I was walking out of a mid-sized boutique firm, my heels clicking hollowly on the pavement, when a familiar silver Porsche pulled up to the curb.

The window rolled down, revealing the face of Blake Sterling. He was one of the "Kings of St. Jude's," a man who had spent three years laughing at my "poverty" while secretly trying to get me into bed behind Julian's back.

"Still trying to find a seat at the table, Maya?" he drawled, his eyes raking over my thrifted blazer with a sneer.

"What do you want, Blake?" I hissed, clutching my briefcase to my chest.

"I just wanted to see if the rumors were true. Word around the club is that Julian put a 'Red Flag' on your name across every HR department in the city." He hopped out of the car, leaning against the door with a cruel grin. "He didn't even have to say much. Just a little whisper that you were a 'thief' who tried to embezzle from the Vane estate. Who's going to hire a thief, Maya?"My blood turned to ice. "I never touched a cent of his money."

"Doesn't matter. In this city, Julian's word is gospel, and yours is trash." Blake stepped closer, his voice dropping to a low, predatory hum. "He's waiting, you know. He told us you'd last about forty-eight hours before you realized you can't even buy a sandwich without his permission. He's got that settlement check on his desk. All you have to do is go to him, apologize for being 'difficult,' and sign the NDA. Maybe if you're sweet enough, he'll let you keep that pathetic little apartment."

I didn't wait for him to finish. I turned and ran. I didn't stop until I was inside my studio apartment, the door triple-locked behind me.

The darkness of the room swallowed me. I didn't turn on the lights. I didn't eat. I just sat on the floor, the cold hardwood seeping into my bones, and I cried. I cried for the girl who thought she had escaped her past. I cried for the woman who realized her husband was now her executioner. I cried until the moon crossed the sky and the sun began to peek through the blinds, leaving me hollow, exhausted, and utterly defeated.

Chapter 4

The sunlight was a cruel, relentless intrusion. It sliced through the gaps in my cheap venetian blinds, laying golden bars across the hardwood floor like the cage I had lived in for three years. I didn't move. I stayed exactly where I had collapsed the night before-curled in a ball, my cheek pressed against the grain of the wood, watching the dust motes dance in the light. They were free. I was buried alive under the weight of a name I no longer owned.

My body felt like it had been reconstructed out of lead. My joints were stiff, my neck throbbed with a dull, rhythmic ache, and my eyes were so swollen from crying that the world appeared through a hazy, red-rimmed blur. Every time I breathed, the scent of the apartment-stale air, old coffee, and the lingering, ghostly trail of Julian's expensive sandalwood cologne on an old sweater-reminded me of my failure.I was twenty-three years old, and I was a ghost.

I looked at my phone, which lay dead a few feet away. I didn't want to charge it. I knew what was waiting for me: mocking texts from the "Kings of St. Jude's," missed calls from debt collectors Julian had once kept at bay, and perhaps a final, cold message from his lawyer asking why I hadn't yet vacated the premises. Julian hadn't just divorced me; he had unplugged my life. He was waiting for the oxygen to run out.

The silence of the apartment was so heavy it felt loud, until a sound shattered it.

Knock. Knock. Knock.

I flinched, a sharp jolt of adrenaline lancing through my lethargy. My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic bird in a cage. Julian. That was my first thought. He had come to see the wreckage. He had come to stand over me in his five-shoes and offer me a pen so I could sign away my dignity in exchange for a roof over my head.

"Go away!" I yelled, but it came out as a pathetic, dry rasp. I cleared my throat, my voice trembling with a mix of terror and leftover rage. "Go away, Julian! I'm not signing anything!"

The knocking didn't stop. It didn't speed up, either. It was steady, rhythmic, and held a terrifyingly calm authority.

"Miss Thorne? I suggest you open this door. I have a standing order to avoid property damage, but I am not a patient man."

The voice was deep, clipped, and entirely unfamiliar. It wasn't Julian's smooth, aristocratic drawl. This was the voice of a man who dealt in facts and steel.I pushed myself up, my muscles screaming in protest. I caught my reflection in the hallway mirror and felt a fresh wave of shame. My hair was a matted bird's nest, my skin was sallow, and my thrifted silk blouse was wrinkled and stained with salt. I looked like a woman who had lost a war.

I walked to the door, my fingers trembling as I undid the three locks I'd installed the day Julian told me about Isabella. I opened the door just an inch, keeping the security chain engaged.

Standing in the dim, carpeted hallway was a man who looked like he belonged in a high-security vault. He was in his late forties, silver-haired and sharp-eyed, wearing a charcoal suit that was so perfectly tailored it made Julian's wardrobe look like fast fashion. He held a matte-black envelope in his hand, the weight of the paper obvious even from a distance."Who are you?" I whispered, clutching the doorframe for support.

"My name is Marcus. I am the Chief of Staff for Mr. Cyrus Thorne," he said, his eyes scanning me with a clinical, detached focus. He didn't look at me with pity-which was a mercy-but he didn't look at me with respect, either. I was a project. An assignment. "Mr. Thorne has been monitoring your... recent difficulties."

The name Cyrus Thorne hit me like a physical blow. The titan of the tech world. The man who had single-handedly dismantled three of Julian's father's subsidiary companies in the last decade. The man from the club.

"Monitoring me?" I asked, my grip tightening on the door. "Why? Is he looking for a front-row seat to my eviction?"Marcus didn't blink. "Mr. Thorne doesn't waste time on entertainment. He invests in potential. And currently, your potential is being strangled by a man who thinks he's a king." He held out the black envelope. "Mr. Vane has spent the last forty-eight hours contacting every major financial firm in the city. He hasn't just blacklisted you, Miss Thorne. He has branded you. He told the board at Sterling & Co. that you were caught attempting to transfer funds from the Vane charity accounts. It's a lie, of course, but a billionaire's lie is more durable than a scholarship girl's truth."

The room seemed to tilt. I felt the bile rise in my throat. Julian hadn't just stopped me from getting a job; he was trying to put me in prison. He wanted me so terrified, so broken, that I would agree to anything just to stay free."Why is Cyrus Thorne telling me this?" I asked, my voice shaking with a new kind of heat.

"Because Mr. Thorne finds Julian Vane's methods... unimaginative," Marcus replied. He unhooked the chain himself-a feat of strength that surprised me-and stepped into the small foyer of my apartment. He looked around at the boxes and the shadows with an air of mild distaste. "Julian wants you to crawl back to him on your knees. He wants a quiet, defeated ex-wife who will disappear into the background while he marries his 'savior.' Mr. Thorne, however, has a different vision."

He handed me the envelope. The paper was heavy, cool, and smelled faintly of expensive tobacco and cedar.

"Inside, you will find a ticket for a private flight leaving from Teterboro in exactly two hours,"Marcus continued, checking a platinum watch on his wrist. "There is a car waiting downstairs. You will be taken to a villa in the South of France for six months, followed by a year in London. You will be provided with a new legal identity, a staff of tutors, and an unlimited expense account. You will learn the languages of power-finance, law, and the art of the deal."

I stared at the envelope, my breath coming in short, jagged gasps. "And the catch? What does he want in return?"

"He wants a partner," Marcus said simply. "In two years, the Vane Group will be vulnerable. Their merger with the Isabella's family is a house of cards built on a foundation of lies. Mr. Thorne intends to knock that house down. He needs someone who knows the interior of the Vane empire. Someone with a personal reason to see it burn."He stepped toward the door, pausing with his hand on the frame. "Julian Vane thinks he threw away a piece of glass. Mr. Thorne knows he threw away a detonator. You can stay here and wait for the police to arrive with that embezzlement warrant Julian is currently drafting... or you can come with me and learn how to take back everything he stole."

I looked at the black envelope. Then I looked at the dead phone on the floor. I thought about the three years I had spent making Julian's coffee, editing his speeches, and warming his bed in the dark, all while he planned to replace me.

I walked to the bedside table and picked up the blue silk handkerchief Cyrus had given me at the club. It was the only thing in this room that didn't feel like a lie.

"I don't need two hours," I said, my voice finally finding its spine. I didn't grab my clothes. I didn't grab my photos. I left the girl who loved Julian Vane behind in that dusty, sun-drenched tomb. "I'm ready now."

Marcus gave a single, sharp nod. "A wise choice, Miss Thorne. Let's go. Your throne is waiting."

As I walked out and the door clicked shut behind me, I didn't look back. The fire had started, and I intended to let it burn until there was nothing left of the Vane name but ash.

Chapter 5

The car that Marcus led me to wasn't just a vehicle; it was a fortress on wheels. It was a black Rolls-Royce Cullinan, the kind of car Julian's father used to reserve for heads of state. As the door was held open for me, I hesitated, my hand clutching the strap of my threadbare bag. I felt like a smudge of charcoal on a pristine white canvas.

"Please, Miss Thorne," Marcus said, his voice as steady as the idling engine. "The schedule is non-negotiable."

I climbed in, the scent of expensive leather and cool, filtered air instantly erasing the smell of the humid city streets. I watched through the tinted windows as my neighborhood-the place where I had lived in a "temporary" apartment for three years, waiting for a husband who never intended to claim me-faded into a blur of grey concrete. By the time we reached the private terminal at Teterboro, the city felt like a dream I had finally woken up from.

The jet was a sleek, silver needle pointed toward the horizon. It bore no logo, no name-just a tail number that whispered of anonymity and power. As I walked up the air-stairs, a flight attendant greeted me by name, her smile perfectly polished.

"Welcome aboard, Miss Thorne. Mr. Thorne has requested that you make yourself completely at home."

The interior of the plane was a master class in quiet luxury. There were no bright lights or cramped seats. Instead, the cabin was lined in soft, cream-colored silk and dark, polished mahogany. A plush captain's chair waited for me, a cashmere throw folded neatly over the armrest. On the sideboard sat a crystal glass of chilled water and a plate of delicate macarons-the very ones I used to see Isabella eating in society magazines.

I sank into the seat, the buttery leather conforming to my tired body. For the first time in forty-eight hours, the adrenaline that had been keeping me upright began to drain away, replaced by a crushing wave of exhaustion and disbelief.

"We will be at cruising altitude in ten minutes," the attendant murmured. "There are fresh clothes in the stateroom at the back, should you wish to change. Mr. Thorne has selected them himself."

I nodded dumbly. Once she disappeared into the galley, I let out a breath I felt like I'd been holding since the night of the divorce. I looked down at my hands. They were still shaking. I was a scholarship girl from the wrong side of the tracks, a secret wife who had been discarded like yesterday's news. Why was the most powerful man in the tech industry treating me like a queen in exile?

The plane took off with a smooth, powerful roar that pushed me back into my seat. As the ground fell away, I watched the sprawling grid of the city shrink until it was nothing but a toy set. Somewhere down there, Julian was likely sitting in a boardroom, or perhaps having lunch with Isabella, laughing about the "mousy girl" he'd finally gotten rid of.

He thought he had won. He thought he had erased me.

A soft chime echoed through the cabin. A sleek, integrated tablet on the armrest began to glow. A call was coming through. My heart skipped a beat. I hit the 'Accept' icon with a trembling finger.

The screen didn't show a face. It showed a high-resolution view of the ocean, the waves rippling under a setting sun. But the voice that filled the cabin was unmistakable. It was the deep, resonant baritone that had haunted my dreams since the club.

"You're late, Maya."

I swallowed hard, my voice catching. "The car arrived on time, Mr. Thorne. I was the one who was... delayed."

"By the ghosts of your past?" Cyrus asked. I could hear the faint clink of ice against glass on his end. "You shouldn't let them haunt you. Ghosts have no power over the living unless you give them permission."

"It's hard to forget three years in three hours," I whispered, leaning my head back against the headrest.

"Then don't forget," he replied, his voice dropping an octave, becoming a low vibration that seemed to pulse in the very air around me. "Use it. Every cold word Julian spoke, every door he slammed in your face today-save them. Wrap them in ice and keep them in your heart. They are the only things that will keep you focused when the work gets difficult."

"Marcus said you're sending me to France," I said, trying to change the subject before the intensity of his voice made me cry again. "Why the South of France?"

"Because you need to learn how to breathe again," Cyrus said. "And because the man who will be teaching you the fundamentals of international law lives in Cap Ferrat. For the next six months, you will not be Maya Thorne, the scholarship student. You will be Maya Thorne, the enigma. You will learn to speak three languages, you will learn to read a balance sheet like a map to a treasure, and you will learn how to walk into a room and make every man in it forget their own names."

I felt a strange, terrifying thrill go through me. "And then?"

"And then, we return," Cyrus said. "And we take what is ours."

"Ours?" I asked. "You don't even know me, Cyrus. Why are you doing all of this? This plane, the clothes, the education... it must cost a fortune."

There was a long silence on the other end of the line. I could almost imagine him sitting in a darkened office, his sharp eyes fixed on a city skyline.

"I've known you longer than you think, Maya," he said softly. "I watched you at the St. Jude's galas, standing three paces behind Julian like a shadow. I watched you edit his father's merger proposals and saw the brilliance in the margins that he was too arrogant to notice. Julian didn't deserve you. He was a child playing with a masterpiece he didn't understand. I, however, understand perfectly."

My breath hitched. "You've been watching me?"

"I've been waiting for you," he corrected. "And now that I have you, I have no intention of letting you go. Go to the stateroom, Maya. Change out of those clothes. Wash the scent of that man off your skin. When you wake up, you'll be in a different world. My world."

The line went dead.

I stared at the screen for a long time, my heart hammering a frantic rhythm. His words were a promise and a threat all at once. He didn't want a wife; he wanted an asset. But the way he said my name... it didn't feel like business. It felt like possession.

I stood up, my legs feeling a bit more stable, and walked toward the back of the plane. I pushed open the door to the stateroom and stopped dead.

It was a bedroom that rivaled any five-star hotel. In the center of the silk-covered bed lay a single outfit: a deep navy-blue wrap dress in heavy, expensive silk, paired with a trench coat that felt like a cloud. Next to them was a pair of simple, elegant heels and a small box.

I opened the box. Inside was a watch. It wasn't covered in diamonds like the ones Julian used to buy for Isabella. It was a classic, understated Patek Philippe. On the back, a tiny inscription was engraved in the gold:

Your time starts now.

I stripped off my old clothes, the thrifted suit that felt like a shroud, and stepped into the small, high-tech shower. I scrubbed my skin until it was pink, washing away the tears, the dust of my old apartment, and the lingering memory of Julian's touch. When I stepped out and put on the blue silk dress, I didn't recognize the woman in the mirror.

She looked colder. Sharper.

I walked back to the captain's chair and curled up under the cashmere throw. As the plane chased the sun across the Atlantic, I closed my eyes. For the first time in three years, I didn't dream of Julian.

I dreamt of a man with storm-grey eyes and a blue silk handkerchief, waiting for me in the shadows of a throne.

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