Five days passed. Five days of forced bed rest, transfusions, and whispered consultations with doctors who looked at her with a mixture of pity and alarm. The heavy curtains of the VIP room were drawn back, letting the afternoon sunlight spill across the floor.
June's color had returned slightly. She was sitting up, watching Vera peel an apple with a small paring knife.
Suddenly, Vera stopped. The knife hovered over the apple. She was staring at her phone resting on the table, her face turning a sickly shade of pale.
June noticed the shift in the room's energy immediately. "What is it? Is it him again?"
Vera hesitated, biting her lower lip. Slowly, she picked up the phone and handed it to June.
The headline on the financial news app was bold and massive: Cole Compton Pledges $10 Million to Establish the 'Alycia Beasley Medical Wing'.
June's eyes scanned the article. The text praised Alycia as a "rising star in the medical field," claiming the donation was to fund her groundbreaking research on neuro-blockers.
Below the text was a photo of Alycia. She was wearing a pristine white lab coat, standing behind a podium with a fake, humble smile plastered on her face. Cole stood right beside her, clapping.
A wave of intense physical nausea hit June's stomach.
Alycia's "groundbreaking research" was a lie. It was a direct plagiarism of an unpublished thesis June had written when she was twenty years old. Alycia had stolen it during a visit to the Compton estate.
June's fingers traced the edge of the phone. The last remaining thread of her patience snapped.
Cole was willing to throw ten million dollars at his mistress to buy her a fake reputation, yet he had restricted June to a meager allowance, monitoring every grocery bill she paid.
June handed the phone back to Vera. Her voice was terrifyingly calm.
"I'm checking out."
Vera dropped the apple. "Are you crazy? The doctor said you need at least another full week of bed rest!"
June threw the blanket off her legs and swung her feet over the edge of the bed. "I've been rotting in this room for almost a week. I have work to do."
Despite Vera's protests, June signed the discharge papers against medical advice.
As they walked through the hospital lobby, the large overhead televisions were broadcasting a live feed of the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new medical wing.
Cole was standing at the microphone. His voice echoed through the hospital lobby.
"Alycia's brilliance deserves to be seen by the world," Cole said, looking at Alycia with deep admiration. "This is just the beginning."
June stood near the pharmacy counter, wearing large dark sunglasses. She watched the screen.
A young nurse standing nearby sighed dreamily. "Mr. Compton is so generous to his girlfriend. His ex-wife must be kicking herself for losing him."
Vera lunged forward, ready to scream at the nurse, but June grabbed her arm, her grip surprisingly strong.
"Not now," June whispered, pulling Vera toward the exit. "Let them climb a little higher. The fall will break their necks."
They pushed through the revolving doors. The crisp New York air hit them, smelling of exhaust and money.
June turned to Vera. "Take me to the bank."
"Which one?" Vera asked, pulling her keys out. "The one near the estate?"
"No," June said flatly. "UBS. The private wealth management branch on Wall Street."
Vera stopped walking. She stared at June. "UBS? June, you need a minimum of ten million in liquid assets just to open the door there."
The corner of June's mouth twitched upward into a cold, sharp smile. "I have an appointment."
Vera drove the Porsche downtown in stunned silence.
June stared out the passenger window as the towering skyscrapers of the financial district swallowed the sky.
She thought about the patent she had registered when she was twenty. The drug that had revolutionized nerve pain treatment. She had hidden her identity to protect herself, and later, to protect Cole's fragile ego when they married.
He thought she was a useless trophy wife who couldn't survive without his credit cards. He had no idea she was the bank.
The Porsche pulled up to the massive, fortress-like entrance of the UBS building.
June stepped out of the car. She adjusted the collar of her simple black coat. Even without designer clothes, her posture had completely changed. The submissive slouch was gone.
She looked back at Vera, who was staring at the building in intimidation.
"Ready to be surprised?" June asked.
The VIP lounge inside UBS was dead silent, save for the soft hum of the climate control. The walls were paneled in dark mahogany, and the leather sofas smelled of pure luxury.
Vera sat rigidly on the edge of the sofa, looking around nervously. She leaned in and whispered, "June, are you sure we're in the right place? They're going to kick us out."
June didn't answer. She took a slow sip of her sparkling water, her posture perfectly relaxed.
The heavy oak door swung open. A man in a bespoke three-piece suit hurried into the room. He was out of breath, a thin sheen of sweat on his forehead.
Mr. Sterling, the senior wealth manager, stopped and bowed deeply.
"Miss Erickson," Sterling said, his voice trembling slightly with respect. "I apologize for the wait. We have been praying for your return ever since you froze your accounts four years ago."
Vera's jaw practically hit the floor. "Four... four years ago?"
June placed her water glass on the table. "Initiate the unfreezing protocol, Sterling."
"Right away, ma'am." Sterling placed a sleek silver briefcase on the table and opened it. Inside was a retinal scanner and a biometric fingerprint pad. He spoke in a low, conspiratorial tone. "The sovereign offshore jurisdiction and multi-layered cryptographic security you established have kept the account completely dormant and invisible, just as you instructed."
June leaned forward. A red laser scanned her eye, and she pressed her thumb against the glass pad.
The machine let out a sharp beep. A green light flashed.
Sterling turned his tablet around and slid it across the polished wood table toward June. "Here is your current asset overview, Miss Erickson."
June glanced at the screen. Her expression didn't change. She pushed the tablet toward Vera.
Vera leaned over. Her eyes widened as she counted the digits.
"Units, tens, hundreds... thousands... millions..." Vera choked on her own saliva.
The balance read: $128,450,000.00.
"One hundred and twenty-eight million?!" Vera shrieked, jumping up from the sofa. "Did you rob the federal reserve?!"
June calmly crossed her legs. "That is the global licensing dividend for the 'Neuro-X' patent over the last four years."
Vera's knees gave out, and she fell back onto the sofa. "The nerve-blocker drug? You invented that?"
June nodded. "When I married Cole, I buried my name. I gave up the lab. I gave up everything to be the perfect wife. But I'm back now."
Sterling cleared his throat respectfully. "How would you like to proceed, Miss Erickson?"
"Transfer fifty million into my checking account immediately," June ordered, her voice crisp and authoritative. "And issue me a Centurion card."
"Consider it done," Sterling said, tapping rapidly on his tablet. "Also, regarding the Compton family trust allowance..."
June let out a dry, humorless laugh. "Sever the connection. And give me a pair of scissors."
Sterling blinked, then quickly produced a pair of silver shears from his desk drawer.
June reached into her purse and pulled out the gold credit card bearing the name June Compton.
With a swift, violent motion, she cut the card in half. The plastic snapped loudly in the quiet room.
She felt a physical weight lift off her chest. The collar around her neck was finally gone.
"Mail the pieces to Cole's office," June said, dropping the broken plastic onto the table.
Half an hour later, June walked out of the bank holding a solid titanium black card.
Vera walked beside her, staring at June like she was a stranger. "You are a billionaire... and you let him treat you like garbage for four years?"
A shadow passed over June's eyes. "Because I thought it was love. Love makes you blind, Vera. And it makes you pathetic."
Meanwhile, across the city, in the penthouse office of the Compton Empire.
Cole was sitting behind his massive glass desk. His phone buzzed with an automated text message from the bank.
He picked it up. Alert: The supplementary card ending in 4092 has been canceled by the cardholder.
Cole frowned. He adjusted his platinum watch, a habit when he was annoyed. He scoffed, tossing the phone back onto the desk.
"Playing hard to get," Cole muttered to himself. He remembered Alycia's words from the phone call: 'She's just being dramatic... the doctors said it was minor.' "She thinks cutting off her own allowance will make me chase her."
He pressed the intercom button. "Sarah, cut off the maintenance fees for June's phone and car. Let's see how long she lasts on the streets before she comes crawling back."
Back on Wall Street, June slipped the black card into her purse.
She turned to Vera, the cold wind whipping her hair around her face.
"Come on," June said. "Let's go buy a house. I need a new headquarters."
The sales office for the Billionaires' Row luxury condominiums smelled of expensive espresso and arrogance.
The real estate agent, a man with too much hair gel and a sharp suit, looked June up and down. He took in her plain black coat and lack of visible designer logos. His smile was tight and dismissive.
"Ladies," the agent said slowly, as if speaking to children. "The entry-level units in this building start at twenty million dollars. Perhaps you're looking for something in a different neighborhood?"
Vera bristled, stepping forward to yell at him, but June simply reached into her purse.
She pulled out the titanium Centurion card and dropped it onto the glass desk. It landed with a heavy, metallic clink.
The agent's eyes snapped to the card. The color drained from his face, replaced instantly by a flushed, eager red.
"I want to see the penthouse," June said, her voice flat. "Right now."
"Of course! Right this way, ma'am!" The agent practically tripped over his own feet rushing to the private elevator.
The elevator shot up to the 90th floor. When the doors opened, the view hit them like a physical blow.
Floor-to-ceiling glass wrapped around the entire apartment, offering an unobstructed, god-like view of Central Park and the Manhattan skyline.
June walked slowly to the glass. Far in the distance, she could see the faint outline of the neighborhood where the Compton estate sat. From up here, it looked like a tiny, insignificant speck.
"This unit is forty-five million," the agent babbled nervously behind her. "It includes a private infinity pool, a dedicated elevator..."
"I'll take it," June interrupted, not turning around. "The purchase will be made through a private LLC. I need the transaction to be discreet."
Vera choked on her spit. The agent gripped the back of a chair to keep from falling over.
"But I have one condition," June added, finally turning to look at him. "I move in today. Get the paperwork done now."
"I will have my legal team draft it within the hour!" the agent gasped, sprinting back to the elevator.
As they waited in the empty, echoing penthouse, June's phone vibrated in her pocket.
It was an unknown number.
June answered. "Hello?"
"Miss June?" a raspy, trembling voice came through the speaker. "It's Arthur. Your father's old driver."
June's hand gripped the phone so tightly her knuckles turned white. Her heart skipped a beat. "Arthur? You've been missing for ten years."
"I've been hiding," Arthur wheezed. "I saw the news about your divorce. You're no longer under the Compton roof. I think it's time I told you the truth."
June walked out onto the massive terrace, the wind howling around her. "What truth?"
"The car crash that killed your parents... it wasn't an accident," Arthur said, his voice dropping to a terrified whisper. "I checked the car the day before. The brake lines were cut."
A wave of dizziness hit June. She grabbed the glass railing to steady herself. "Who did it?"
"I saw your uncle, Richard Erickson, in the garage that night," Arthur said. "And... he was meeting with someone from a powerful family. I couldn't see his face, but he drove a car with the Compton emblem."
The blood froze in June's veins. A Compton car?
"I have proof," Arthur continued frantically. "But they found me. I need money to disappear."
"How much?" June demanded instantly. "I'll give you whatever you want."
"One hundred thousand. Cash. Meet me at the abandoned Brooklyn Navy Yard docks at midnight tonight."
The line went dead.
June stood on the balcony, the cold seeping into her bones. Her marriage hadn't just been a lie; it might have been a cage built by the people who murdered her parents.
Vera walked out onto the terrace. "Everything okay? You look like you've seen a ghost."
June slowly lowered the phone. Her eyes, staring out at the city, were darker than the impending night.
"This isn't just a divorce anymore, Vera," June said, her voice vibrating with a dangerous energy. "This is a war."
The agent rushed back onto the terrace, holding a thick leather folder. "Congratulations, Miss Erickson. Welcome to your new home."
June took the heavy metal keys. They felt like weapons in her hand.