Part 2:
The sound of Marcus Vale’s footsteps thundered through the mansion like a storm breaking loose.
Every conversation died.
The violinist near the fireplace stopped playing halfway through a note. Laughter disappeared. Champagne glasses remained suspended in the air as if even the guests were afraid to move.
I stood at the bottom of the staircase with one hand wrapped around the handle of my suitcase and the other pressed against my stomach.
Not because there was anything to feel yet.
The baby was too small.
A secret smaller than a whisper.
But in that moment, with Marcus coming toward me like the whole world had betrayed him, my body moved on instinct. Protect. Hold. Shield.
He appeared at the top of the staircase.
For a second, I forgot how to breathe.
Marcus Vale was always controlled.
That was the first thing people noticed about him. The stillness. The measured voice. The calm expression that made powerful men sweat because they could never tell what he was thinking.
But now his control was gone.
His black suit jacket hung open. His tie was loosened. His dark hair, usually neat, looked like he had dragged a hand through it too many times. In one fist, he held the divorce papers. In the other, the pregnancy test.
The two pink lines faced outward.
Every guest saw them.
Every man who feared him.
Every woman who whispered about me behind manicured fingers.
Every person in that house watched the most powerful man in Chicago turn pale.
“Elena.”
My name left his mouth in a voice I had never heard before.
Not angry.
Not cold.
Afraid.
I tightened my grip on the suitcase.
Behind me, the front door stood twenty feet away. Snow swirled beyond the glass. My driver would be waiting soon. My flight was still possible if I left now.
But Marcus was descending the stairs.
One step.
Then another.
The mansion remained silent.
“Put the suitcases down,” he said.
It was not a command this time. Not exactly.
It sounded like a man asking the floor not to collapse beneath him.
“No,” I said.
The word surprised me with its steadiness.
His jaw clenched. His eyes dropped to my hand against my stomach. Something moved across his face—shock, realization, pain—but he pushed it down before anyone else could see too much.
“Everyone out,” Marcus said.
No one moved.
His voice lowered.
“Now.”
The room came back to life all at once.
Men reached for coats. Women gathered purses. Security guided people toward the side exits with practiced efficiency. No one asked questions. No one dared.
Within minutes, the Christmas party dissolved into the cold Chicago night.
The music stopped completely.
The mansion that had been full of glitter and noise became enormous and hollow.
Only a few of Marcus’s closest men remained near the hallway, uncertain whether to stay or vanish.
Marcus did not look away from me.
“Out,” he said again.
They left too.
Finally, it was just us.
The tree lights blinked gold and white beside us. Snow pressed against the windows. Somewhere in the kitchen, a door swung softly and clicked shut.
Marcus stood halfway down the staircase, still holding the papers and the test.
“Were you going to tell me?” he asked.
A humorless laugh escaped me.
“That is a remarkable question coming from a man who hasn’t asked me how I am in eight months.”
His expression tightened.
“Elena.”
“No,” I said, lifting a hand before he could say anything else. “You don’t get to say my name like that. Not now. Not after finding out I exist only because I left evidence on your desk.”
His face changed again. The words had hit him. I saw it. But seeing pain in Marcus did not satisfy me the way I had imagined it might. It did not repair anything. It only made the room feel colder.
He came down the remaining steps slowly.
I stepped back.
He noticed.
For a moment, something like shame flickered through his eyes.
“I would never hurt you,” he said quietly.
“You already did.”
The silence that followed was heavier than shouting.
Marcus looked at the pregnancy test in his hand as if it were something sacred and terrifying.
“How far along?”
“Eight weeks.”
His eyes closed.
Eight weeks.
The number landed between us with cruel precision.
Eight weeks of me waking up nauseous before sunrise.
Eight weeks of hiding crackers in my nightstand.
Eight weeks of reading articles alone under the glow of my phone while my husband slept at his penthouse office, or at least that was what he told me.
Eight weeks of fear.
Eight weeks of hope.
Eight weeks of waiting for a moment that never came.
His voice dropped. “Why didn’t you tell me?”
“I tried.”
His eyes opened.
“You tried?”
I laughed once, bitterly.
“Three times.”
Marcus went still.
“The first time was the morning after the charity gala. You were leaving for a meeting. I asked if we could talk. You said, ‘Not now, Elena.’ You didn’t even look up from your phone.”
He swallowed.
“The second time was at dinner. I made your favorite meal. You took one call before dessert and never came back.”
“Elena—”
“The third time was last night.” My voice trembled, but I forced the words out. “I stood outside your study for twenty minutes. You were talking to Luca about shipments and accounts and men I don’t know. When I knocked, you told me to go to bed.”
He looked away.
That hurt worse than any excuse.
Because he remembered.
He remembered all of it.
The great Marcus Vale, who never missed a detail, had missed me on purpose or by habit, and neither answer mattered anymore.
“I thought I was protecting you,” he said.
I stared at him.
“From what? A conversation? A marriage? A husband?”
His grip tightened around the papers.
“This life is complicated.”
“Our marriage was not complicated, Marcus. You made it lonely.”
The sentence broke something open between us.
His shoulders shifted, like he had taken a blow he refused to show.
For years, I had known him as a man carved from discipline. He could sit across from enemies and make them confess with nothing more than silence. He could read a room in three seconds. He could predict betrayal before it had a name.
But standing in front of his wife with divorce papers in one hand and proof of a child in the other, he looked lost.
“You cannot leave tonight,” he said.
My heart hardened.
“There it is.”
His brows drew together. “What?”
“The order. I was wondering when the husband would disappear and the boss would arrive.”
He came closer, then stopped when I stepped back again.
“I am not ordering you.”
“You said I cannot leave.”
“Because there are things you do not understand.”
I leaned forward slightly, my voice low.
“There are many things I understand now.”
“Elena—”
“I understand that this house is not a home. I understand that your world always came first. I understand that I have spent years explaining your absence to myself because admitting the truth hurt too much.”
His face lost more color.
“And what truth is that?” he asked.
“That I was easier to ignore because you thought I would always be here.”
A sound came from him then, quiet and rough, not quite a breath.
He turned his head toward the window.
Outside, the last guest’s car slipped through the gates. The driveway lights glowed through the snow.
When he looked back at me, his eyes were darker than before.
“You’re right,” he said.
I had prepared myself for denial. Anger. Bargaining. A promise made too late.
I had not prepared myself for agreement.
Marcus lowered the divorce papers to his side.
“You’re right,” he repeated. “I treated your love like it was permanent no matter what I did with it. I told myself distance was protection. I told myself keeping you out of things kept you safe. I told myself you were better off not knowing why I came home late, why I left rooms when my phone rang, why I stopped taking you with me.”
My throat tightened.
“Those sound like excuses.”
“They are.”
The tree lights reflected in his eyes.
“I do not have a defense good enough for what I did to you.”
For a moment, I saw the man I had married.
Not the boss.
Not the legend whispered through Chicago.
Just Marcus.
The man who used to bring me coffee in bed even though he hated the smell of cinnamon. The man who once drove three hours in a storm because I said I missed the ocean and he wanted to show me Lake Michigan under lightning. The man who proposed in a tiny bookstore because that was where we first met, between shelves of old poetry.
That man stood in front of me now, buried under years of choices.
And I hated that part of me still wanted to reach for him.
The doorbell rang.
Both of us turned.
The sound was soft, polite, ordinary.
In that house, at that hour, it felt impossible.
Marcus’s expression sharpened instantly. The emotional wreckage vanished behind instinct. His body angled slightly in front of mine before I realized he had moved.
“Stay here,” he said.
I almost snapped at him, but something in his tone stopped me.
This was not control.
This was alarm.
One of his security men appeared from the hallway, speaking quietly into an earpiece.
“Boss,” the man said. “There’s a driver at the front gate. Says he’s here for Mrs. Vale.”
Marcus looked at me.
My mouth went dry.
“That’s my car,” I said.
His gaze held mine.
“Where were you going?”
“San Diego.”
“With who?”
“Alone.”
His eyes narrowed slightly. “Who booked the car?”
“I did.”
“When?”
“This afternoon.”
“Through what service?”
I frowned. “Marcus, I am leaving you, not planning a bank robbery.”
“Answer me.”
The firmness in his voice irritated me, but the worry beneath it unsettled me more.
“A private airport transfer company,” I said. “Simone recommended them.”
His security man shifted near the door.
Marcus did not look away from me. “Did you give them this address?”
“Yes.”
“And your flight details?”
“Yes.”
He turned to the guard. “Bring the driver inside. Do not let the car leave.”
The guard nodded and disappeared.
I stared at Marcus.
“You are unbelievable.”
“Elena, listen to me.”
“No. I have listened for years.”
“You booked a car from this house on Christmas Eve, under your real name, to a private terminal, after signing divorce papers against a man whose enemies would pay fortunes for information that his wife is unprotected.”
His words landed one by one.
I hated that he had a point.
I hated more that fear slid beneath my ribs before I could stop it.
“I didn’t know,” I said quietly.
“I know.”
The softness of that answer made my eyes burn.
He looked at the pregnancy test again, and his entire expression changed.
“Now there is more at risk than either of us understood.”
Before I could answer, the security man returned with the driver.
He was young, maybe mid-twenties, wearing a dark coat dusted with snow. His cheeks were red from the cold. He looked nervous but not dangerous.
Marcus studied him.
“What is your name?”
“Daniel, sir.”
“Who sent you?”
“The booking came through dispatch.”
“What dispatch?”
The driver named a company I recognized from the confirmation email.
Marcus nodded once to his guard.
“Verify it.”
The guard stepped away.
Daniel glanced between us. “Is something wrong?”
Marcus’s voice remained calm. “That depends.”
The young man swallowed.
I suddenly felt exhausted. The adrenaline that had carried me down the stairs began to fade, leaving behind nausea and the faint tremble in my knees.
Marcus noticed immediately.
“Elena.”
“I’m fine.”
“You’re pale.”
“So are you.”
That almost made him smile.
Almost.
Then the security guard returned, his expression tight.
“Boss, the company has no record of this driver.”
Daniel’s face went blank.
“What? That’s impossible.”
Marcus moved before I could process the words. Not violently. Not dramatically. He simply stepped closer, and the room seemed to shrink around him.
“Who sent you?” he asked again.
Daniel lifted both hands. “I don’t know. I swear. I got a call from someone claiming to be dispatch. They said the app was down and gave me the pickup details manually. Cash bonus for Christmas Eve.”
Marcus’s eyes sharpened.
“What details?”
Daniel swallowed. “Name. Address. Flight time. Terminal. And…” His gaze flicked toward me.
Marcus’s voice lowered. “And?”
“And that Mrs. Vale would be traveling alone.”
The room tilted.
My hand returned to my stomach.
Marcus saw it, and something dangerous passed through his face, but he controlled it.
“Who called you?”
“A woman.”
I froze.
Marcus turned slightly. “A woman?”
Daniel nodded quickly. “Yes. She sounded… professional. Calm. She told me not to come to the main gate at first, then changed her mind ten minutes ago. Said there was too much security near the side entrance.”
My skin went cold.
Only one person knew about my plan.
Only one person knew I wanted to leave quietly.
Simone.
No.
The thought was so ugly that my mind rejected it immediately.
Simone had saved me more times than I could count. She had answered every late-night call. She had told me I deserved more. She had offered me her guest room, her car, her life if I needed it.
She would never put me at risk.
Would she?
Marcus was watching my face.
“Who knew?” he asked.
I shook my head. “No.”
“Elena.”
“No.”
His voice softened. “Who knew?”
I looked toward the snow-dark windows.
“Simone.”
A muscle moved in his jaw.
“My best friend,” I said quickly. “She wouldn’t do this.”
“I didn’t say she did.”
“You thought it.”
“I think many things. I know very few.”
The honesty of that answer made it worse.
Marcus handed the pregnancy test and divorce papers to no one. He kept them in his hand as though letting go would make them disappear.
“Take him downstairs,” he said to his guard. “Keep him comfortable. No intimidation. Get the phone number that contacted him and bring me the call log.”
Daniel looked terrified.
Marcus turned to him. “You are not in trouble unless you lie.”
The driver nodded too fast and allowed himself to be led away.
When we were alone again, the mansion felt different.
Less like a prison.
More like a place with hidden doors.
I wrapped my arms around myself.
“You think Simone betrayed me.”
“I think someone knew where you would be tonight.”
“Maybe the company made a mistake.”
“Elena.”
The way he said my name told me he would not insult me by pretending.
I sank onto the bottom step of the staircase. My legs had become unsteady.
Marcus moved toward me, then stopped.
He had learned, at least in that moment, not to assume he had the right.
“May I?” he asked.
The question was so small. So late.
I nodded once.
He sat beside me, leaving space between us.
For a while, neither of us spoke.
The Christmas tree hummed softly with electricity. A silver ornament near the bottom reflected us in warped miniature—me in my ivory coat, Marcus in black, sitting side by side like strangers after a disaster.
“I didn’t tell you the whole truth,” he said.
I stared ahead.
“That doesn’t surprise me.”
He accepted that.
“The last eight months were not just business.”
I turned slowly.
He looked at the divorce papers in his hand.
“There was a federal investigation. Not into me directly. Into men connected to men connected to me. It was messy. Dangerous. I was told your name appeared in a file.”
“My name?”
He nodded.
“Why?”
“I didn’t know. That was what frightened me.”
Marcus Vale admitting fear should have felt impossible.
But there it was again.
Raw. Controlled. Real.
“I started keeping distance from you publicly,” he continued. “No events. No dinners. No photos. No travel. I thought if people believed our marriage had cooled, you would seem less valuable.”
I stared at him.
“You made me feel abandoned as a strategy?”
His face tightened.
“Yes.”
The word was quiet.
It devastated me more than any lie.
“Did it work?” I asked.
“No.”
I looked down at my hands.
All those nights.
All those empty dinners.
All those mornings waking up alone and telling myself he was busy, stressed, burdened.
And somewhere behind it all, he had chosen loneliness for me without ever asking whether I wanted his protection at that cost.
“You should have told me,” I said.
“I know.”
“You should have trusted me.”
“I know.”
“I am not a vase on a shelf, Marcus. I am a person. I was your wife.”
“Are,” he said.
I looked at him sharply.
His eyes lowered to the papers.
“Legally,” he added.
The small correction hurt, but not as much as it might have hours earlier.
Because now the anger had company.
Fear.
Confusion.
A tiny, treacherous thread of understanding.
“I don’t know how to forgive this,” I said.
“I am not asking you to tonight.”
“Then what are you asking?”
He turned toward me.
“To let me get you safely through Christmas Eve.”
The sentence was not romantic. It was not enough. It did not fix our marriage, erase the driver, or explain why my best friend’s name suddenly felt like a question mark.
But it was the first request Marcus had made in years that did not sound like he expected obedience.
I looked toward the door.
My car was not safe.
My flight details were compromised.
Simone was not answering the calls I had made earlier that evening, though I had assumed she was wrapping presents with her nieces or asleep from exhaustion after her hospital shift.
A strange thought came to me.
“What if Simone is in trouble?”
Marcus’s focus sharpened.
“Call her.”
I pulled out my phone.
My fingers trembled as I tapped her name.
It rang.
Once.
Twice.
Five times.
Voicemail.
I called again.
Nothing.
A text bubble from earlier stared at me.
Can’t wait to see you. You’re doing the right thing. I’ll be waiting.
I showed it to Marcus.
He read it carefully.
“When was this?”
“Six thirty.”
“Did she usually write like that?”
“What do you mean?”
He handed back the phone.
“‘I’ll be waiting.’ Does that sound like her?”
I looked at the message again.
My stomach turned.
Simone was dramatic, funny, impatient. She sent voice notes instead of texts because she claimed typing was for people who had no personality. She used too many emojis. She called me “Lena,” never “you.”
Can’t wait to see you.
You’re doing the right thing.
I’ll be waiting.
It sounded like someone pretending to be supportive.
Not Simone.
I stood too quickly and swayed.
Marcus rose with me, one hand hovering near my arm without touching.
“I need to go to her,” I said.
“No.”
My eyes flashed.
“Elena, not because I forbid it. Because if someone used her phone or copied her style badly, walking into that blind is exactly what they want.”
“Then what do we do?”
“We find her before they know we’re looking.”
We.
The word settled between us.
I wanted to reject it.
I wanted to say there was no we anymore.
But my baby existed because there had been a we once. My heart was breaking because I had believed in that we more than anything.
And Simone might be in danger because of me.
“Fine,” I said. “But I’m not going upstairs and pretending none of this happened.”
“No,” Marcus said. “You’re not.”
He pulled out his phone and made three calls.
I watched him work.
There was no shouting. No threats. No theatrical anger. Just precise instructions in a voice so calm it made the room colder.
Find Simone Carter.
Check hospitals first.
No police scanner chatter unless necessary.
Trace the spoofed dispatch call.
Secure airport records.
Keep it quiet.
At the mention of Simone’s last name, I blinked.
“She’s not a Carter,” I said.
Marcus paused.
“What?”
“You said Simone Carter.”
His eyes shifted to mine.
“I assumed from your side.”
“No. Simone’s last name is Bell.”
For a few seconds, neither of us moved.
Then Marcus looked down at the divorce papers in his hand.
My signature.
Elena Carter Vale.
My maiden name.
The name I was trying to return to.
He lifted the top page slowly, scanning the document as if seeing it for the first time.
“What is it?” I asked.
His expression changed in a way that frightened me more than rage ever could have.
He went completely still.
“These papers,” he said. “Where did you get them?”
“My attorney.”
“What attorney?”
“A woman Simone recommended. Patricia Wells.”
Marcus looked at me.
“I don’t know that name.”
“You don’t know every divorce attorney in Chicago.”
“No,” he said. “But I know the ones willing to file against me.”
My throat tightened.
He turned the page toward me.
At first, I did not understand what I was looking at.
Then I saw it.
Near the bottom.
Not in the section where I had signed.
In the witness line.
A name typed neatly beneath a blank signature space.
Marian Vale.
I stared at it.
“That’s impossible.”
Marcus’s mother had been dead for nine years.
Marian Vale had died before I married him. I had seen photographs of her in the house, always in black and white, always elegant, always unsmiling. Marcus rarely spoke of her. When he did, there was a softness in him that belonged to old grief.
But there was her name.
Printed on my divorce papers.
Witness: Marian Vale.
My voice barely worked.
“Is this some kind of mistake?”
Marcus did not answer right away.
Then he folded the papers closed with careful hands.
“No.”
The mansion seemed to recede around me.
“Marcus?”
He looked toward the hallway, then at the ceiling, then back at me as if the walls themselves had become untrustworthy.
“My mother’s legal name was not Marian Vale,” he said quietly.
I felt the hair rise on the back of my neck.
“What?”
“That was the name she used publicly after she married my father.”
“Then why is it on the papers?”
His eyes met mine.
“Because someone wanted me to see it.”
The house phone rang.
The sound cut through the foyer so sharply I flinched.
Marcus crossed to the side table and picked it up.
He said nothing.
I watched his face.
At first, there was only concentration.
Then his eyes moved to me.
The color drained from his face again.
Not shock this time.
Recognition.
He listened for a few seconds, then spoke in a voice I could barely hear.
“Who is this?”
Silence.
His grip tightened around the receiver.
Then a woman’s voice came faintly through the line.
I could not make out every word.
Only one sentence reached me clearly.
“Tell Elena not to trust the woman waiting in San Diego.”
My knees weakened.
Marcus slowly lowered the phone.
The line had gone dead.
I stared at him.
“What woman?”
He did not answer.
“Marcus,” I whispered. “What woman?”
He looked down at the divorce papers again.
Then at the pregnancy test still held in his other hand.
For the first time all night, the most feared man in Chicago looked not like a man facing an enemy, but like a son hearing a ghost.
“Elena,” he said, voice strained. “My mother’s real name was Simone.”
END OF PART 2 – LIKE, SHARE AND COMMENT “THE ENTIRE STORY” IF YOU WANT TO READ THE FULL STORY