Chapter 1: The Ambush at the Marina
The heavy, salty air of the Miami marina felt like lead in my lungs as I stepped out of the air-conditioned, chauffeured SUV.
I was thirty-four years old, the founder and CEO of Aegis Systems, a multinational cybersecurity and smart-infrastructure conglomerate. I worked eighty-hour weeks. I lived on airplanes, hotel coffee, and the constant, vibrating hum of corporate responsibility. My marriage to Marcus had become just another high-maintenance project I was desperately trying to keep afloat.
Marcus was thirty-six, handsome, and possessed an aura of old-money confidence. The irony, of course, was that his “old money” lifestyle was entirely funded by my new-money dividends. He claimed to be an entrepreneur, perpetually on the verge of launching a groundbreaking app, but his days consisted mostly of golf, personal trainers, and spending the generous allowance I transferred to his accounts to keep the peace.
I was exhausted. Our five-year anniversary was approaching, and I had decided we needed a hard reset. I had quietly liquidated $150,000 of my personal stock options to charter a private seaplane and rent an exclusive, unplugged villa on a private island in the Bahamas. It was supposed to be a week of reconnection. No laptops. No board meetings. Just us.
But as my driver unloaded my single, modest suitcase onto the sun-drenched wooden pier, I froze.
Marcus was standing near the boarding dock of our chartered seaplane. He wasn’t alone. He was surrounded by a fortress of matched, monogrammed Louis Vuitton luggage.
Flanking him on the left were his parents, Barbara and Richard. Barbara was a deeply entitled woman who wore too much jewelry and despised my independence, constantly reminding me that a woman’s true worth was measured by how well she kept her husband’s home.
And standing on his right, wearing a sheer, designer beach cover-up and holding a glass of complimentary champagne provided by the dock staff, was Chloe.
Chloe was Marcus’s ex-girlfriend. They had supposedly remained “just good friends” after our wedding—a narrative I had foolishly accepted to avoid being labeled a jealous wife.
I walked slowly down the pier, the rhythmic click of my heels echoing over the sound of the idling seaplane engine.
“Marcus,” I said, my voice tight with confusion and a rising, icy dread. “What is going on? Why is your family here? Why is Chloe here?”
Marcus turned, looking at my simple linen dress with a fleeting expression of annoyance. He sighed heavily, acting as though my shock was a massive inconvenience to his day.
“Eleanor, relax,” Marcus said smoothly, gesturing to the group. “Mom and Dad haven’t had a real vacation in years. And Chloe… well, Chloe has been going through a devastating breakup. She’s heartbroken. She really needed a getaway to clear her head. It’s a massive six-bedroom villa, El. There’s plenty of room.”
He had invited his ex-girlfriend and his highly critical parents on our private, $150,000 anniversary trip. He hadn’t asked me. He hadn’t consulted me. He simply assumed I would foot the bill and fall in line.
I stared at him, the sheer, breathtaking audacity of it rendering me momentarily speechless. “This is our anniversary trip, Marcus. It’s supposed to be just the two of us.”
Chloe took a sip of her champagne, offering me a pouty, condescending smile. “Oh, Eleanor, don’t be so rigid. It’s a private island! We won’t even be in your way. Besides, Marcus said you’ve been so stressed with work, you probably just want to sit inside anyway.”
Before I could even process the absolute insanity of Chloe’s comment, Barbara sashayed forward. She looked me up and down with unvarnished disgust, adjusting her oversized sun hat.
“Honestly, Eleanor, you should be thrilled,” Barbara sneered, her voice carrying over the dock. “Marcus works himself to the bone dealing with your constant absences. The least you can do is let him enjoy himself with people who actually appreciate him. It’s his money you’re spending anyway. The courts consider it joint income, you know.”
She smiled a venomous, triumphant smile.
Marcus didn’t correct her. He didn’t defend me. He stepped closer to me, lowering his voice, attempting to employ his usual manipulative charm.
“Look, El, let’s just make the best of it,” Marcus commanded softly, though there was a hard, entitled edge to his tone. “Since we have a full house, you can handle the cooking and the household logistics at the villa while we enjoy the beach and the boats. You’re so good at organizing things. It might remind you of your place, you know? Being a wife for a change, instead of a boss.”
The world went dead silent. The squawking of the seagulls, the hum of the seaplane, the gentle lapping of the ocean against the pier—it all vanished.
For five years, I had poured my soul, my youth, and my fortune into this man, hoping to earn his respect. But standing on that pier, looking at his arrogant, dismissive face, my heart didn’t break.
It calcified. It turned into solid, impenetrable titanium.
I didn’t scream. I didn’t cry. I didn’t throw a hysterical fit on the docks for the marina staff to gossip about.
I simply smiled. It was a smile so bright, so sharp, and so entirely devoid of warmth that it was practically lethal.
“You’re absolutely right, Barbara,” I said smoothly, my voice ringing with terrifying, crystal clarity. I looked at Marcus, my eyes dead. “You all go ahead. Have a fantastic trip.”
Marcus grunted in approval, clearly believing he had successfully bullied me into submission. He turned his back, eagerly placing his hand on the small of Chloe’s back to lead her toward the seaplane boarding ramp.
He failed to notice me stepping quietly backward into the cool shade of the terminal awning, pulling out the ‘little laptop’ he so deeply despised from my tote bag, preparing to initiate a total, catastrophic system override on his entire existence.
Chapter 2: The Digital Execution
Standing in the quiet, air-conditioned shade of the luxury marina terminal, my fingers flew across the keyboard of my laptop with the ruthless, surgical detachment of a CEO eliminating a fatal liability.
I had spent my entire adult life building impenetrable digital fortresses for governments and Fortune 500 companies. Dismantling the financial infrastructure of one arrogant, parasitic man was the easiest coding I had done in a decade.
First, I logged into the highly secure luxury concierge portal that had arranged the trip. The itinerary was loaded on the screen: Private Seaplane Charter, Villa Paradiso 7-Day Rental, Private Chef Services (Canceled by Mr. Marcus Cross).
He had canceled the private chef so I would have to cook for his mistress. The absolute, sociopathic cruelty of that detail fueled my keystrokes.
I clicked the red button marked CANCEL ENTIRE ITINERARY.
A warning box flashed on the screen: WARNING: Cancellation within 24 hours of departure incurs a $50,000 non-refundable penalty fee. Do you wish to proceed?
I authorized it without blinking. Fifty thousand dollars was nothing. It was the cheapest divorce retainer I would ever pay in my life. I hit CONFIRM.
Next, I opened my primary banking app. I had created a secondary, heavily funded checking account for Marcus years ago, linking three Platinum American Express cards to it so he never had to ask me for an allowance.
With three rapid taps, I initiated a hard freeze on every single card sitting in his Prada wallet. The cards were now useless pieces of plastic.
I navigated to our primary joint checking account. It held roughly half a million dollars in liquid cash—money I had deposited just last week from a stock dividend. I initiated a wire transfer, draining the account down to exactly zero dollars and zero cents. The funds were instantly routed into my impenetrable, heavily encrypted Aegis corporate trust, an account Marcus didn’t even know existed, let alone had access to.
Finally, I opened the proprietary smart-home application for our sprawling, ten-million-dollar Bel-Air mansion. The entire estate ran on Aegis software.
I accessed the biometric security logs. I deleted Marcus’s thumbprint from the master gate registry. I deleted his retina scan from the front door. I changed the six-digit override codes, locked the garage containing his leased Ferrari, and activated the full perimeter lockdown protocol.
It took me exactly four minutes. In two hundred and forty seconds, I had systematically, legally, and entirely erased Marcus from my financial and physical universe.
I snapped the laptop shut, slipping it back into my tote bag.
I walked out of the terminal shade, sliding into the plush, cool leather seat of my waiting SUV. My driver, David, a stoic former military contractor who had been with me for years, looked at me in the rearview mirror.
“We aren’t flying today, David,” I said, tapping the privacy glass. “Take me to the Four Seasons downtown, please. I need a suite for the week.”
“Right away, Ms. Eleanor,” David replied smoothly, putting the heavy SUV into gear.
I poured myself a glass of sparkling water from the minibar, leaning back against the leather headrest. I watched through the heavily tinted, bulletproof windows as the SUV slowly pulled away from the marina.
Through the glass, I could see Marcus standing by the seaplane ramp, confidently handing his Platinum Amex to the captain to cover the incidental docking fees.
I took a slow, refreshing sip of my water, completely unbothered by the fact that the captain was currently looking at his portable card reader with a deep frown, shaking his head apologetically as he handed the card back to my soon-to-be ex-husband.
Chapter 3: The Declined Card
“What do you mean it’s declined? Run it again! It’s a Platinum card! Do you know who I am?!”
Marcus’s voice, usually a smooth, practiced baritone, cracked into a shrill, panicked shriek. He was standing on the blistering hot wooden planks of the pier, his face flushing a dark, violent red in the sweltering Miami heat.
The seaplane captain, a seasoned professional who dealt with wealthy, entitled tourists daily, remained entirely impassive. He held the electronic tablet out, pointing to the stark, red lettering on the screen.
“Sir, the transaction wasn’t just declined for insufficient funds,” the captain explained, his voice projecting clearly over the sound of the idling engine. “The primary account holder, Ms. Eleanor Cross, contacted our corporate office three minutes ago. She flagged this entire itinerary as fraudulent and terminated the charter. The payment authorizations have been revoked. You are no longer cleared for boarding.”
Barbara gasped loudly, clutching the pearls at her throat as if she were having a heart attack. “Terminated?! Marcus, this is ridiculous! Call your wife this instant and tell her to stop this hysterical nonsense! We are baking in the sun!”
Marcus frantically pulled his sleek smartphone from his pocket, his hands shaking slightly. He dialed my number.
He didn’t know I had already blocked him. The call went straight to a harsh, disconnected tone.
“Dammit!” Marcus roared, shoving the phone back into his pocket. He ripped open his wallet, his fingers fumbling as he pulled out a secondary black card, then a third. He shoved them at the captain. “Here! Use these! Just get us on the damn plane!”
The captain sighed, swiping the second card. The machine beeped a harsh, angry tone. The screen flashed bright red: ACCOUNT FROZEN – CONTACT ISSUING BANK.
He swiped the third card. The result was identical.
“Sir,” the captain said, his tone shifting from polite to stern. “All of your cards are locked. I cannot allow you to board this aircraft. Please step away from the ramp.”
The illusion of Marcus’s immense power and wealth was violently, publicly disintegrating.
Chloe, sweating profusely in her designer, sheer beach cover-up, crossed her arms tightly over her chest. The admiring, submissive tone she had used just ten minutes earlier had completely vanished.
“Marcus, I thought you said you handled the finances,” Chloe sneered, her voice dripping with toxic annoyance. “I canceled a photoshoot for this trip. Are we going to the Bahamas or are we just going to stand on a public dock looking like idiots?”
“I’ll fix it! Just give me a minute!” Marcus yelled, his panic escalating into a frantic, manic energy. He opened his banking app on his phone, intending to show the captain the half-million-dollar balance in his checking account to prove his liquidity.
The app loaded. The balance read: $0.00.
Marcus stared at the screen, all the blood draining from his face. The color of his arrogant, sun-tanned skin turned to a sickly, translucent grey. He refreshed the app. He closed it and opened it again. Zero. Nothing. The money was gone.
“Excuse me, folks,” a deep voice interrupted. Two burly marina security guards stepped onto the pier, flanking the seaplane captain. “You’re blocking the loading zone for paying customers. I’m going to have to ask you to collect your luggage and clear the private dock immediately.”
“Do not touch my bags!” Barbara shrieked as a guard reached for her Louis Vuitton suitcase.
Miles away, in the quiet, air-conditioned sanctuary of a sprawling penthouse suite at the Four Seasons, I sat on a plush velvet sofa. My laptop was open on the glass coffee table in front of me.
I was watching the live security logs from my banking portal. A continuous, rapid-fire stream of red notifications was pinging across the screen.
DECLINED: Seaplane Charter Docking Fee.
DECLINED: Uber Black (Miami Marina to MIA Airport).
DECLINED: American Airlines (4 First Class Tickets to LAX).
DECLINED: Hertz Car Rental (Luxury SUV).
He was desperately trying to buy his way out of the humiliation, using the frozen cards over and over again, completely trapped in the reality of his own making.
I smiled, taking a delicate sip of chilled champagne, feeling a profound, terrifying serenity settle over my soul.
But the financial freeze wasn’t the only thing I was executing from the penthouse. While Marcus and his entourage were standing on the curb outside the marina, arguing with a confused taxi driver who wouldn’t take a frozen credit card, I ran a deep, forensic cyber-audit on Marcus’s recent banking activity.
I had always respected his privacy, assuming the large sums of money he withdrew were going toward the operational costs of the “startup” he was supposedly building.
But as my algorithms tore through the encrypted data of his digital footprint, the sickening truth emerged.
Marcus didn’t have a startup. There was no app.
For the last fourteen months, he had been secretly wiring ten thousand dollars a month to an LLC registered under Chloe’s name. He had been paying the exorbitant rent on a luxury penthouse for his “heartbroken” ex-girlfriend, funding her lavish lifestyle with the very money I had nearly worked myself into an early grave to earn.
He hadn’t just invited his mistress on my anniversary trip. He had been using my blood, sweat, and tears to finance his affair for over a year.
I closed the audit file, saving it directly to a secure, shared drive with my lead corporate litigator. The slight sting of betrayal was instantly vaporized by the searing heat of a supernova-level rage.
I didn’t just want to strand Marcus in Miami. I wanted to salt the earth he walked on.
Chapter 4: The Impenetrable Fortress
It took Marcus, his furious parents, and his increasingly hostile mistress nine hours to get back to Los Angeles. Unable to use his frozen credit cards to buy plane tickets, Marcus had been forced to suffer the ultimate humiliation: begging his father, Richard, a retired dentist living on a fixed pension, to drain his modest savings account to buy them four middle-seat, economy-class tickets on a budget airline.
By the time their cheap, cramped rental sedan idled up the winding, canyon roads of Bel-Air, it was past midnight. They were exhausted, smelling of stale airplane air, and vibrating with a toxic, exhausted fury.
The rental car pulled up to the towering, imposing wrought-iron gates of my estate. The mansion sat on three acres of prime real estate, hidden behind high walls and dense security hedges. It was a fortress.
Marcus slammed the gearshift into park and stormed out of the car, marching up to the sleek, black biometric scanner mounted on the stone pillar.
“I am going to divorce that psychotic bitch,” Marcus snarled to Chloe, who was rolling her eyes in the passenger seat. “I’m taking half of everything she owns. I’ll make sure she’s ruined.”
He slammed his thumb aggressively against the glowing green glass of the scanner.
The light flashed a harsh, angry red. ACCESS DENIED.
Marcus frowned, wiping his thumb on his shirt and pressing it again. ACCESS DENIED.
“Open the damn gate, Eleanor!” Marcus roared, his voice echoing into the quiet, wealthy night. He punched the digital keypad, aggressively typing in his six-digit master override code.
The screen blinked: ERROR – USER NOT FOUND.
“She locked us out!” Barbara shrieked from the backseat, rolling down the window. “Call the police, Marcus! This is illegal! She can’t lock you out of your own home!”
Marcus reared back and violently kicked the solid iron bars of the gate. “ELEANOR! OPEN THIS GATE RIGHT NOW!”
Slowly, with a heavy, mechanical hum, the massive iron gates began to glide open.
Marcus smirked, turning back to the car. “See? She’s watching on the cameras. She knows she went too far.”
But as the gates opened wide enough to reveal the sweeping, cobblestone driveway of the estate, Eleanor wasn’t standing there.
Instead, a blinding pair of high-intensity tactical spotlights clicked on, illuminating the rental car. Three imposing, massive men dressed in dark tactical gear stepped out from the shadows of the guardhouse. They were elite private military contractors employed by Aegis Systems’ physical security division. They didn’t carry weapons openly, but their sheer, terrifying physical presence was a lethal deterrent.
They flanked a fourth man. He was dressed in a sharp, impeccably tailored grey suit, carrying a thick, sealed leather folder.
It was Mr. Sterling, my lead corporate litigator and the most ruthless divorce attorney on the West Coast.
Marcus froze, his arrogant smirk melting off his face. “Who the hell are you people? Get off my property.”
“Mr. Marcus Cross, I presume?” Mr. Sterling asked, his voice smooth, cold, and entirely devoid of emotion. He didn’t wait for an answer. He walked forward, stopping just at the property line, and held out the heavy leather folder. “Step away from the gate. You are trespassing on private property owned solely by the Aegis Corporate Trust.”
“I am her husband!” Marcus yelled, though his voice cracked.
“Not for long,” Mr. Sterling replied, thrusting the folder directly into Marcus’s chest. “You have been formally served.”
Marcus stumbled back, instinctively grabbing the folder. “What is this?”
“Inside is an expedited, fault-based divorce filing,” Mr. Sterling explained, his voice projecting clearly so the women in the car could hear every devastating word. “It includes a comprehensive forensic audit detailing the $140,000 of marital funds you systematically embezzled over the last fourteen months to pay the rent and living expenses of your mistress, Chloe Vance.”
In the rental car, Chloe gasped loudly, snatching her designer sunglasses off her face. Barbara let out a shrill, breathless shriek.
“That audit has already been submitted to the family court judge,” Mr. Sterling continued relentlessly. “It invokes the specific, ironclad infidelity and embezzlement clauses outlined in the prenuptial agreement you signed five years ago. An agreement that waives your right to all spousal support, all equity in this property, and demands the immediate restitution of the stolen funds.”
“Prenup?!” Chloe shrieked from the car, shoving the door open and stepping out. She marched up to Marcus, her eyes blazing. “You told me you didn’t sign a prenup! You told me you owned half her company!”
“Chloe, baby, wait, it’s not what you think—” Marcus stammered, his entire world collapsing around him in real-time.
“Oh, and Mrs. Cross,” Mr. Sterling added, looking past Marcus directly at Barbara, who was hyperventilating in the back seat. “Inside that folder is also a 72-hour formal eviction notice for the luxury townhouse you and your husband currently reside in. A townhouse that is legally owned by my client’s LLC. You have three days to vacate the premises before the sheriff removes your belongings.”
Barbara slumped against the car door, sobbing hysterically into her hands. The wealthy, entitled matriarch who had sneered at me on the docks was now entirely, undeniably homeless.
Chloe didn’t hesitate. She snatched the heavy legal dossier from Marcus’s trembling hands. She flipped it open, her eyes scanning the negative bank balances, the forensic audit, and the brutal reality of the prenuptial agreement.
She looked at Marcus with an expression of pure, unadulterated disgust.
“You’re broke,” Chloe sneered, tossing the heavy folder directly at his chest. It hit him with a loud thwack, scattering legal papers across the pavement. “You’re a pathetic, broke loser playing with your wife’s money.”
Chloe pulled out her phone, aggressively tapping the screen to hail her own premium rideshare. She didn’t say another word to him. She walked down the dark, winding canyon road toward the main boulevard, leaving the ‘titan of wealth’ crying on the sidewalk in front of a gate he would never, ever cross again.
Chapter 5: The Market Opens
Six months later, the contrast between the two diverging paths of our lives was absolute, staggering, and undeniably poetic.
In a bleak, fluorescent-lit family courtroom in downtown Los Angeles, Marcus sat at the petitioner’s table. He was wearing a cheap, ill-fitting, off-the-rack suit, his posture slumped and defeated. The arrogant, sun-tanned man from the Miami pier was entirely gone, replaced by a hollow shell drowning in legal fees he couldn’t afford.
The judge, a stern woman with zero tolerance for financial manipulation, had been merciless.
“The prenuptial agreement is ironclad and legally sound,” the judge declared, banging her gavel. “Mr. Cross, you willfully embezzled marital funds to support an extramarital affair. You are hereby denied any and all claims to spousal support. Furthermore, a civil judgment is entered against you for the restitution of the $140,000, plus legal fees. We are adjourned.”
Marcus buried his face in his hands, weeping silently. Without my money to artificially inflate his lifestyle, he was completely unemployable in the high-stakes tech world he used to pretend he belonged to. His parents, Barbara and Richard, having been evicted from the luxury townhouse, were forced to move into a tiny, cramped apartment in a lower-income neighborhood, entirely abandoned by the high-society friends who only loved them for the lavish parties I used to fund.
They were drowning in the exact reality they had created for themselves.
Miles away from the depressing grey walls of the courtroom, the atmosphere was electric.
It was 9:00 AM on Wall Street. The trading floor of the New York Stock Exchange was a chaotic, buzzing sea of blue jackets, ringing phones, and massive digital ticker screens.
I stood on the iconic, overlooking balcony.
I wasn’t wearing a simple linen dress or an exhausted, accommodating smile. I was wearing a stunning, razor-sharp, custom-tailored crimson power suit. My hair was styled flawlessly, and my eyes were bright, clear, and focused.
The heavy, suffocating weight I had carried for five years was gone. I had spent my marriage believing my exhaustion was the result of my eighty-hour work weeks. I had thought the anxiety, the self-doubt, and the constant need to prove my worth were just the side effects of being a female CEO in a male-dominated industry.
I was wrong. The exhaustion wasn’t from my job. It was from carrying the crushing, parasitic weight of a man who actively drained my energy to fuel his own ego.
The moment I cut Marcus out of my life, the fog had lifted. My creative and professional energy had skyrocketed. Unburdened by the constant demands of a toxic marriage, I had focused entirely on Aegis Systems. In six months, I had secured three massive federal contracts and finalized the architecture for a revolutionary new cybersecurity AI.
I reached out, placing my hand on the polished wooden handle of the heavy brass bell.
As the clock struck 9:30 AM, I smiled radiantly for the flashing cameras of the financial press. I pulled the handle, ringing the opening bell to a thunderous, echoing roar of applause from the trading floor below.
Aegis Systems was officially a publicly traded company. We opened at a staggering, record-breaking ten-billion-dollar valuation.
The air felt crisp and light. There were no condescending voices telling me to cook. There were no ungrateful mouths demanding my servitude. I looked down at the cheering crowds, feeling a profound, heavy, and beautiful peace settle over my soul.
I had spent five years funding an illusion, desperately trying to buy love from a man who only loved my money. But today, standing on the balcony of the financial capital of the world, I officially owned the reality.
I stepped off the podium to a flurry of congratulations from my board of directors. My executive assistant, a sharp, fiercely loyal woman named Sarah, handed me a glass of celebratory champagne.
She leaned in close, speaking quietly over the roar of the crowd. “Eleanor, a prepaid burner phone just left a rambling, three-minute voicemail on your secondary office line. It was Marcus. He was begging for a loan to cover his court fees.”
I took a slow sip of the crisp, expensive champagne. I didn’t feel a flicker of anger. I didn’t feel pity. I felt absolutely, wonderfully nothing.
“Did you delete it, Sarah?” I asked smoothly.
“I deleted it and blocked the number before the voicemail even finished playing, Boss,” Sarah smiled fiercely.
“Good,” I replied, turning my back on the past forever. “Let’s go celebrate.”
Chapter 6: The True Vacation
Exactly one year later.
It was a bright, flawless, breathtakingly beautiful afternoon on a secluded private island in the Bahamas. The sky was a brilliant, cloudless azure, melting seamlessly into the crystal-clear, turquoise waters of the Caribbean Sea.
I was reclining on a pristine white, plush sunbed on the expansive overwater wooden deck of Villa Paradiso. The gentle, rhythmic sound of the waves lapping against the stilts of the deck provided a soothing, natural soundtrack.
A tall, frosted crystal glass of vintage champagne rested lightly in my hand.
The salty ocean air no longer felt like lead in my lungs, as it had on that sweltering Miami pier a year ago. It smelled of sweet, unadulterated, absolute freedom. There were no laptops hidden in my tote bag. There were no frantic phone calls, no board meetings, and, most importantly, there were no parasites demanding my servitude.
I was taking the exact vacation I had originally planned, but on my own, glorious terms.
I closed my eyes behind my designer sunglasses, letting the warm Caribbean sun heat my skin. I thought back to that moment on the docks. I remembered the heavy, suffocating feeling of Marcus standing next to his mistress, flanked by his arrogant mother, commanding me to perform “wife duties” and handle the cooking and cleaning. I remembered Barbara sneering at me, telling me to remember my “place.”
I smiled, taking a slow, refreshing sip of my champagne, the golden liquid sparkling in the sunlight.
They had tried to humiliate me. They had tried to break my spirit and reduce me to a maid in a house I had bought.
But they were right about one thing. I did need to remember my place.
My place wasn’t standing in a hot kitchen preparing meals for a woman who was sleeping with my husband. My place wasn’t shrinking myself to appease the fragile ego of a man who couldn’t handle his own inadequacy.
My place was at the absolute, untouchable top of the food chain, far beyond the reach of mediocre, greedy men who wanted to turn a titan into a maid.
As the sun began to set over the crystal-clear water, painting the vast sky in brilliant, fiery hues of gold, crimson, and violet, a shadow fell over my sunbed.
I looked up. A handsome, incredibly successful tech investor from the neighboring villa—a man I had met earlier that week while swimming, who actually respected my intellect and viewed me as an equal—walked over down the wooden pier. He was holding two fresh, chilled glasses of champagne, smiling with genuine, respectful admiration.
“I thought you might need a refill, Eleanor,” he said, offering the glass. “The sunset is supposed to be spectacular tonight.”
I took the glass, the cool crystal feeling perfect in my hand. I looked out at the boundless, beautiful horizon.
“It already is,” I replied, returning his smile.
I clinked my glass against his, the clear, ringing sound signaling the beginning of a magnificent, limitless new chapter. A chapter where I would never, ever have to play the janitor again.
