If you don’t kneel down and apologize to my mistress, I’m going to teach you exactly where you belong in this house.”
Those were the final words my husband, Nathan Brooks, said to me before he lifted the riding crop that had been hanging like decoration in the main living room of our mansion in Beverly Hills.
The first strike landed across my back before my mind could fully understand that Nathan—the man I had married before God and in front of half of Los Angeles’s business elite—was truly willing to hurt me.
The second stole the air from my lungs.
By the tenth, my knees were pressed against the cold marble floor.
By the twentieth, bl00d had stained the very flooring I had chosen myself back when I still believed that house would be a home.
A few steps away, Madison was smiling.
Madison Blake, the woman Nathan introduced at corporate events as his “image consultant,” stood beside him in a champagne-colored dress I recognized immediately. I had paid for it with one of my own cards, though at the time I hadn’t known it was meant for her.
“Poor Sophia,” she said softly, her sweetness soaked in poison. “She still wants everyone to think she’s the victim.”
I lifted my head as much as I could. My back burned, my lips trembled, but the deepest pain wasn’t in my body.
It was watching my husband look at me like I was trash.
“She hum!liated me at dinner,” Nathan said, gripping the crop tighter. “In front of my partners.”
“Madison told everyone I was useless because I hadn’t given you children,” I answered, my voice breaking.
Madison gave a quiet little laugh.
“I only said what people already whisper about. After three years of marriage, it’s normal for people to wonder.”
“You also said I married Nathan for his money.”
Nathan tilted his head and smiled with disgust.
“Didn’t you?”
That strike didn’t draw bl00d, but it broke something deeper.
For three years, I had been the perfect wife.
Quiet.
Elegant.
Always standing just behind his shoulder at investor dinners in Manhattan, grand openings in Miami, and charity galas in Newport.
I smiled when he spoke.
I applauded when he won awards.
I never asked to be included on documents.
I never demanded shares.
I never used my family name.
Nathan loved telling people he had met me when I had “nothing,” that I was just a simple girl from Savannah whom he had turned into a society wife.
That story benefited him.
It made him look powerful.
He never asked why my mother’s last name didn’t appear online.
He never wondered why banks suddenly approved impossible loans after he married me.
He never questioned why men who once ignored his calls suddenly wanted dinner meetings whenever I walked into a room.
Madison stepped closer, crouched in front of me, and lifted my chin with two fingers.
“Apologize,” she whispered. “Maybe then I can convince Nathan to let you keep living in the Palm Springs house after the divorce.”
The word sliced straight through me.
“Divorce?”
Nathan threw a folder beside my bl00d-stained hand.
“It’s over, Sophia. I’m tired of dragging around a wife who brings nothing to my life. Madison is pregnant.”
The room went silent.
Madison placed one hand over her still-flat stomach and smiled like she had just been crowned queen.
For one moment, I felt no pain.
Only clarity.
Everything I had endured for love, loyalty, and hope turned into ash.
I looked at the folder.
Then at the crop.
Then at my husband.
And I understood that my father had been right from the beginning.
With shaking fingers, I reached for my phone, which had fallen near the sofa. Nathan laughed.
“What are you going to do? Call the police? Go ahead. Tell them your millionaire husband had to correct his hysterical wife.”
My lip was split, but I still smiled.
“No,” I said.
“I’m calling my father.”
Nathan stopped laughing.
My father answered on the second ring.
I swallowed bl00d, forced air into my lungs, and said:
“Dad… do what you told me. Destroy his life.”
On the other end of the line, my father answered calmly:
“Stay exactly where you are, sweetheart. It has already started.”
And then Nathan’s phone began ringing nonstop.
He had no idea what was about to happen.
At first, Nathan still thought he was in control.
He looked at his phone with irritation, as if a call could possibly be more inconvenient than seeing his wife bleeding on the floor.
“Not now,” he muttered.
He hung up.
The phone rang again.
Then Madison’s phone started ringing.
Then the house phone.
And before Nathan could say another word, the front door burst open.
His assistant, Ryan, rushed inside, pale as paper, his suit jacket soaked from the rain outside.
“Mr. Brooks,” he said, nearly breathless. “We have an emergency.”
Nathan clenched his jaw.
“What the h3ll is going on?”
Ryan looked at me on the floor, saw the bl00d, saw the riding crop in Nathan’s hand, and immediately lowered his eyes.
“The investment trust has been frozen. First National has ordered an urgent review of all Brooks Group accounts. The merger with Northern Development has been suspended. The board wants an immediate call.”
Nathan froze.
“That’s impossible.”
My father’s voice came calmly through my phone.
“Sophia, don’t move. Security is already outside the house.”
Madison stepped back.
“What is happening?”
I held the phone against my chest.
“Thank you, Dad.”
Nathan stared at me as if he were seeing me for the first time.
“Who is your father?”
I used a nearby side table to pull myself up. Every movement burned through my back, but I was done kneeling.
“The man who warned me not to marry you.”
Ryan swallowed hard.
“Sir… there’s more. Harrington Capital has withdrawn its credit guarantee.”
The color drained from Nathan’s face.
Harrington Capital was the hidden foundation beneath everything he bragged about.
His towers in Chicago.
His residential developments in Austin.
His political donations.
His dinners with governors.
His rented private jets that helped him look richer than he truly was.
Without that guarantee, his empire wouldn’t survive a week.
Madison frowned.
“Harrington? What does she have to do with Harrington Capital?”
I looked directly at her.
“My name isn’t Sophia Miller.”
Nathan stopped breathing for a second.