Celina POV:
The air in my old apartment was stale, heavy with memories I longed to shed. Every item I touched felt imbued with a phantom pain. My heart was a hollow drum, echoing the emptiness within me. I was packing a small suitcase, just the essentials, when the front door burst open. Haywood. His face was a mask of thunder, his eyes spitting fire.
"What do you think you're doing, Celina?" he roared, his voice bouncing off the walls. He wasn't invited. He hadn't been invited anywhere near me for days.
"Leaving," I stated, my voice flat, devoid of emotion. I didn't even flinch. I was past fear. I was past everything.
He took a menacing step closer. "Leaving? After what you've done? Filing that ridiculous police report? Trying to frame Keith?" His words were laced with disgust.
I stopped packing, slowly turning to face him. My gaze was steady, unwavering. "You know exactly what he did, Haywood. He killed my mother. He kidnapped me. He tried to assault me."
Haywood scoffed, running a hand through his perfectly styled hair. "Don't be dramatic. A minor accident. And as for your claims of... assault, Anika assures me it was nothing more than your desperate attempt to cling to attention."
"My mother is dead, Haywood," I said, each word a shard of ice. "Did you even know that? Did you even care?"
He paused, a flicker of surprise in his eyes. Only a flicker. "Your mother? What are you talking about? I thought she was... ill."
A bitter laugh escaped my lips. "Ill? She was run over. By Keith Tran. He hit her, then he backed up and ran her over again. Twice. He murdered her, Haywood. And you knew. You knew and you protected him."
His face hardened instantly. "Absurd. Keith would never. It was a tragic accident."
"An accident that you helped cover up," I countered, my voice rising. "An accident that you used your influence to bury. An accident that left my father in a hospital bed, needing surgery that you refused to fund! The money you froze! And because of that, he died too, Haywood. My father is dead!"
A vein pulsed in his temple. "Don't you dare try to pin your father's death on me, Celina. You were always so tight-fisted. If you had just sold some of those gaudy trinkets you hoard, perhaps he would still be alive."
My jaw dropped. The sheer audacity, the callous disregard for human life, for my family. "Tight-fisted? You froze all my accounts! You cut me off completely! What was I supposed to sell? My own blood?"
He sneered. "Perhaps. You always valued material possessions more than true affection. You're just like every other woman who married into money."
"You think I married you for money?" I whispered, my voice thick with disbelief. "I loved you, Haywood! I tried. I really tried. And you... you reduced me to this." My gaze fell to the broken locket on the dresser. My mother's and father's lives were gone. My love for him, a distant, painful memory. There was nothing left but a cold, burning desire for retribution. "I will see Keith Tran in jail, Haywood. I will see him pay for what he did to my family. And you... you will regret every single moment you stood by him."
His face contorted into an ugly scowl. Just then, the apartment door swung open again, and Anika glided in, her eyes wide with feigned concern. "Oh, Haywood, darling, what's all this shouting? And Celina, why are you still here?"
She turned to me, her voice dripping with fake sweetness. "Celina, I heard about your... unfortunate incident with Keith. I'm so terribly sorry. Here, let me offer you something for your troubles." She pulled out a chequebook, scribbling quickly. "For your... pain and suffering. Let's just put this all behind us, shall we?"
She extended the cheque, a triumphant glint in her innocent eyes. Haywood, his anger momentarily diverted by Anika's performance, watched me, a smug expression on his face.
"She's offering you a settlement, Celina," Haywood said, his voice laced with disdain. "Take it. It's more than you deserve."
Anika added, "And please, don't say I never tried to help. You know, these last few weeks have been so hard on Keith. He's so sensitive. And with all the company's financial... restructuring," she glanced pointedly at Haywood, "we've been under immense pressure."
Haywood snatched the cheque from Anika's hand, his eyes burning into mine. "This is a generous offer, Celina. A very generous offer. Take it, and disappear. Forget this absurd pursuit of justice. It's childish. It's foolish. It's beneath you." He named a figure that was astronomical, far more than Anika had initially written. He thought money could buy my silence. He thought money could buy my humanity.
I remained silent, my gaze unwavering.
"Not enough, Celina? How much do you want? Name your price." He clicked his tongue, annoyance etched on his face. "Five million? Ten? You always were greedy."
I slowly bent down, picking up the check. Haywood's smug expression deepened. "Good. Finally, some sense."
But instead of holding it, I tore it in half. Then again. Until it was a shower of worthless paper fluttering to the floor. I looked at Haywood, then at Anika, my eyes colder than the gravestones that marked my parents' resting places. I didn't say a word. I didn't need to.
Haywood's face turned a dangerous shade of red. "You foolish woman! Do you have any idea what you're doing?" He pointed a finger at me, his voice trembling with rage. "I will ruin you, Celina! Your family's business? Gone. Your career? Finished. Every last shred of your reputation? Annihilated. You will have nothing left!"
"I already have nothing, Haywood," I replied, my voice chillingly calm. "You made sure of that. But I still have my truth. And I will expose yours."
His sneer returned. "Your truth? Don't make me laugh. No one will believe you. You're a disgraced liar. A seductress. A gold-digger." He pulled out his phone, his fingers flying across the screen. "You want to play hardball, Celina? Fine. I'll make sure that police report disappears. And your lawyers? They'll find themselves disbarred for even contemplating your insanity." He held the phone to his ear, barking orders into it. "Get rid of it. Tell them she's unstable. Unreliable." Then he hung up, a triumphant smirk on his face. "Now, what was that about your truth?"
My heart sank, a cold, heavy stone. He was right. He had the power. He had the influence. He had already silenced me once.
Moments later, my phone vibrated. A text from the lead detective. "Case closed. Insufficient evidence. Mental instability concerns raised." My hands clenched, the tiny device feeling like a lead weight. Then another call. My former boss. "Celina, I'm sorry. We're cutting ties. Your... recent troubles... it's affecting our ratings. Sponsorships are pulling out." The line went dead.
My phone buzzed again, this time with a message from my aunt. "Celina, please, darling. Don't fight him. He's too powerful. Just take the money and leave. For your own good."
A profound chill settled over me, colder than any winter night. I looked from the phone in my hand to Haywood's smug, victorious face. He saw my devastation, my despair. He thought he had won. He thought he had broken me completely.
A strange, guttural sound escaped my throat. A laugh. A high-pitched, hysterical cackle that morphed into anguished sobs. Tears streamed down my face, but they were not tears of weakness. They were tears of pure, unadulterated rage. I laughed and cried, my body shaking with the force of it.
Haywood watched me, a flicker of something unreadable in his eyes – unease? Pity? He took a hesitant step forward. "Celina, perhaps... perhaps we can discuss this rationally. I can offer you a generous stipend. A new apartment. You don't have to live like this."
I slowly lifted my head, my eyes burning. My hand went into my purse, pulling out a folded document. I smoothed it with trembling fingers, then held it out to him. It was a property deed, or so it appeared. My lawyer had drafted it perfectly. I had meticulously hidden the "DIVORCE AGREEMENT" header beneath a strategically placed sticky note, which I'd peeled off just moments before. The only visible words were about property transfers.
"Sign this, Haywood," I said, my voice eerily calm. "And you can have everything you want." I flipped to the page with the signature line, obscuring the rest of the text with my hand.
He looked at the paper, then at me, a condescending smirk on his face. "So, it was a villa you wanted all along, wasn't it? Fine. Just sign it and be gone." He grabbed the pen, scrawled his signature without a second glance, then tossed it back at me. "There. Now you have your precious property. Just like I always knew you'd prefer material gain over me." He chuckled, a cold, mocking sound.
I clutched the signed paper to my chest, a small, triumphant smile playing on my lips. "You can give me all the villas in the world, Haywood," I said, my voice barely a whisper, "but you can't give me back my parents' lives. You can't give me back my peace. And you can't erase what you've done."