Marta moved about quietly, her loyal maid for nearly a decade. She placed a basket of fresh bread on the table and whispered, Señora, you must eat.
Elena offered a faint smile. Thank you, Marta. And she refused to eat as her stomach rejected food.
Before Marta could retreat, footsteps intruded. Heavy, confident. Victor.
He strode into the room as if he owned it, his cane clicking against the marble. His suit was impeccable, his tie blood-red against the somber morning. He did not glance at Marta, who slipped out quickly, head bowed.
Ah, the grieving widow, Victor drawled, taking a seat at the far end of the table. Already enjoying the spoils?
Elena set her cup down with deliberate calm. I don't recall inviting you to breakfast.
Victor leaned back, his eyes glittering. You'll find, dear Elena, that I no longer require your invitations. This house, this fortune, belongs to the Marquez bloodline. Not to some outsider who happened to share Adrian's bed.
Her chest tightened, but she forced her voice steady. It belongs to me, by Adrian's will.
Victor's cane tapped against the floor, sharp, impatient. Adrian was a fool in many ways. Easily manipulated when drunk. Easily distracted by beauty. He let the insult hang in the air like smoke.
Elena's nails pressed into her palms beneath the table. She would not give him the satisfaction of flinching. Is there a reason you came, or did you simply wish to practice cruelty over breakfast?
Victor's smile was thin and dangerous. I came to warn you. There are forces circling, Elena. Men Adrian owed, men who will not take kindly to you holding the reins. Without me, you'll be devoured.
And with you? she asked coldly. With me, you might survive.
It was not an offer; it was extortion. Elena met his gaze across the long table, refusing to bow. I will take my chances.
Victor's smile vanished. His voice dropped, low and venomous. You'll regret those words.
He rose, his cane striking the marble like a gavel, and swept out of the room.
Elena exhaled shakily once he was gone, but her reprieve was short-lived. Marta returned moments later, clutching a small silver tray. Upon it lay a single envelope, thick cream paper with her name written in bold strokes.
This was at the gate, Señora, Marta whispered.
Elena took it, her fingers trembling slightly. The handwriting was unfamiliar, jagged, impatient. She broke the seal.
The note was brief, but its words sank like stones in her chest:
Your husband's death was no accident. You are next.
Her vision swam. For a heartbeat, she could not breathe. Then she folded the letter carefully, hiding the tremor in her hands before Marta could see.
Nothing important, Elena lied, tucking it into her pocket. Thank you.
But inside, dread coiled tighter. Adrian's death had already left her exposed; now someone wanted her gone entirely.
The day crawled forward, heavy with unease. Servants moved about in hushed tones. Elena buried herself in paperwork, though her eyes barely registered the words. The empire Adrian left her was vast real estate, shipping, investments, laced with hidden debts. Each page revealed another secret he had kept, another snare she had inherited.
By late afternoon, she sought refuge in the library again. The fire crackled weakly, throwing soft light against the dark shelves. She had just begun to lose herself in the rhythm of documents when the door opened without warning.
Damian Cross.
This time, she did not startle. Some part of her had expected him, as though his presence had already threaded itself into her days.
You have an unfortunate habit of appearing unannounced, she said, her voice cool.
His gaze swept over her, sharp and assessing. And you have an unfortunate habit of looking like a target.
She stiffened. What exactly do you mean? Okay then, a note was delivered this morning to you
How do you know about this? She then gasped immediately.
Because threats leave trails, he said. The messenger was sloppy.
Elena's hand moved unconsciously toward her pocket. Then you already know what it said.
I know enough. But I'd rather hear it from you.
She hesitated. Part of her screamed to keep him out, to guard every secret. Yet another part, the weary, frightened part, longed to share the weight. Slowly, she drew the folded letter and handed it to him.
Damian read it once, twice, his jaw tightening. This isn't idle intimidation. Whoever sent this believes you're vulnerable.
I am vulnerable, Elena whispered. The words escaped before she could stop them.
For the first time, his expression softened. Not pity something steadier, a recognition of truth. That's why you need to stop facing this alone.
Her chest tightened, torn between fear and an inexplicable pull toward him. And you would protect me? Out of duty?
His eyes held hers unwavering out of necessity. If Adrian was murdered, your life is leveraged, And I don't leave loose threads.
The fire crackled louder in the silence that followed, filling the space between them. Elena's pulse quickened. Damian was dangerous, perhaps more dangerous than Victor. Yet with him, danger carried a strange, disarming steadiness.
She looked away, breaking the intensity of his gaze. Then tell me, Detective. Where do we begin?
Damian folded the note, slipping it into his coat. We begin by assuming nothing is as it seems. Not your staff, not your allies, not even your family. Trust no one, Elena. Not unless you're willing to wager your life.
His words cut deeper than he knew. She had already gambled everything, once her heart, her future, on Adrian. And she had lost.
Now, as she watched Damian vanish once more into the shadows of her house, she wondered if she could survive wagering again.