He thought I was finally learning. I was finally leaving Chapter 04
For the first time that night, Adriano didn’t answer.
He stood with the divorce papers in his hand, staring at me as though this could still be folded back into place if he chose the right words.
“All right,” he said. “I should have handled this differently.”
His voice was calm, gentle. Adriano was always most persuasive when he believed he was being generous.
“Tomorrow I’ll give you direct authority over the residence office,” he said. “No more approvals, no more routing personal expenses through anyone else. If you want your own discretionary account, it’s yours. If you want the household staff answering to you, I’ll make that change.”
He watched me carefully, certain he had finally found the wound.
“And if this is about Viviana, then I’ll move her off the residential books. The estate manager, the drivers, the house staff will report to you.”
Then his tone softened again.
“And your care won’t be routed through anyone else again. I’ll cover the clinic retainer myself. Every doctor, every follow-up, every bill.”
For three years, that pattern had worked. After every humiliation, he offered a concession. After every injury, he handed me something and called it protection. For a man like Adriano, that counted as apology.
Once, it would have been enough.
But he was too late.
“Adriano,” I said, “I don’t want authority over your house. I don’t want your accounts. I don’t want the staff. I don’t want another promise that arrives after the damage is done.” I held his gaze. “I want a divorce.”
The softness left him piece by piece.
He stared at me, waiting for me to bend first. When I didn’t, something colder settled over his face.
“Enough,” he said.
“I know you’ve been on edge for weeks, but you are not making this decision in a clear state of mind.” He stepped closer, not touching me now. “You’re upset, you’re worn down, and you’re turning one bad day into something permanent.”
There was no cruelty in his tone. That was what made it unbearable. He meant every word.
“You are not walking out of here alone tonight,” he continued. “Without my name on your back, without my people watching the doors, you have no idea how exposed you are.”
I said nothing.
His jaw hardened.
“I’m trying to stop you from doing something you’ll regret when you’ve calmed down. Don’t make me lock this floor down until you come to your senses.”
Everything he took from me came dressed as protection. He had placed another woman between me and the life that was supposed to be mine because he said it made things easier. He had trusted that same woman over me while I was bleeding because he said he was preventing panic. And now he stood between me and the door, mistaking control for care.
He still believed I was safest in a cage.
I picked up my travel bag.
“Then let me regret it,” I said.
For the first time, disbelief crossed his face.
He had expected tears, rage, bargaining. He had not expected me to walk past him as though he no longer had the power to stop me.
But he didn’t follow.
Pride held him where he stood. So did certainty. Adriano had spent too long believing I could not survive outside the life he had built around me.
To him, this was still another emotional overreaction, the kind that burned hot and passed quickly, ending the way they always did. I would come back once the world outside frightened me enough.
My hand closed around the door handle.
Behind me, I heard him draw a breath, as though he might finally say something that mattered.
He didn’t.
I opened the door and stepped out.
The sound of it shutting behind me cracked through the penthouse like a gunshot.
Only then, alone in the silence, did Adriano seem to feel the first edge of something unfamiliar.
He slipped a hand into his coat and touched the brass lighter engraved with his initials—the one I had commissioned for him after he mentioned missing his father’s old lighter.
His phone lit up.
Viviana.
Don’t go after her, the message read. She’s upset, and she wants to force your hand.
A second message followed.
Let her cool off. Once she sees what life looks like without you, she’ll come back on her own.
Adriano stared at the screen, then closed his hand around the lighter until the metal bit into his palm.
Yes, he told himself. That was all this was.
In a day or two, I would understand what I had walked away from. I would come back shaken, tired, and ready to be reasonable.
And when I did, he would make sure I never spoke of divorce again.