“Right side,” I whispered.
His jaw flexed. “They’ll pay for that.”
They lifted me like glass. Every inch was agony, but Rocco kept murmuring, “Slow. Breathe shallow. I’ve got you.”
When they carried me upstairs, I saw my house as if it belonged to strangers. Barrett’s security guards were face-down in the hallway, alive but useless. Our housekeeper cried silently against the pantry door. Taryn was on her knees in the kitchen, still wrapped in my robe, while a man held her wrists behind her back.
Barrett was kneeling beside her, shirt half-buttoned, face gray with terror.
The sight of me made him lunge forward. “Mallory! Tell them this is a misunderstanding!”
I looked at him over Rocco’s shoulder. “Is that what you call three broken ribs?”
His eyes darted to the men surrounding him. “I panicked. You attacked Taryn. Her father is Leland Vance. Do you understand what you did?”
Rocco leaned close to Barrett. “Do you understand what you did?”
Barrett went quiet.
Outside, a limousine waited at the bottom of the steps. The back door opened, and my father stepped out.
Dominic Romano looked older than my memories, but not weaker. Silver threaded his black hair. His expensive coat hung from his shoulders like armor. When his eyes landed on me, something in his face cracked.
“Sophia,” he whispered, using my mother’s nickname for me.
I had not heard it since I was seven.
He reached toward me, then stopped, afraid even his hand might hurt me.
“Medical center,” he told Rocco. “Dr. Evans. Private entrance.”
Then he looked past me into the house.
Barrett began babbling. “Mr. Romano, sir, I didn’t know she was your daughter. She never told me—”
My father’s gaze cut him silent.
“That,” Dominic said, “was the smartest thing she ever did.”
In the car, he sat beside me while I trembled under a cashmere blanket. The privacy partition rose, sealing us inside a hush of leather and grief.
“I should have known,” he said.
“You couldn’t.”
“I should have protected you.”
“I left,” I whispered. “I chose Mom’s life.”
His mouth tightened at her name. “Your mother wanted peace for you.”
“I found a monster instead.”
For the first time that night, tears came. Not loud sobs. I could not afford those. Just hot streams sliding into my hair while I stared at the ceiling of the limousine.
My father took out his phone. “Give me his full name.”
“Barrett Hayes.”
A pause.
“Hayes Construction?”
“Yes.”
His eyes narrowed. “Garrett Hayes’s son.”
I turned my head slightly. “You know them?”
“I know everyone who deserves to be remembered.”
There was something in his voice I did not understand yet.
At the private medical center, doctors were already waiting. No forms. No insurance questions. They slid me through a side entrance into a bright room where machines hummed softly and nurses moved with military precision.
Dr. Evans, a calm woman with steel-gray hair, read the scans. “Three fractured ribs. No punctured lung, thank God. But you need rest. Pain control. No stress.”
My father gave one humorless laugh. “That last part may be difficult.”
After they wrapped my ribs and settled me into a suite nicer than most hotels, he sat beside my bed until sunrise. He made calls in low, dangerous tones. Men named banks, lawyers, judges, board members, city inspectors.
At dawn, I woke to him saying, “No. Not yet. She decides.”
I opened my eyes. “Decides what?”
He hung up.
“What happens to him,” he said.
I stared at the ceiling. Every breath hurt. Every blink replayed Barrett’s boot.
“What would you do?” I asked.
Dominic’s face became still. “I would make him disappear.”
“No.”
His eyebrows lifted.
“No,” I repeated, stronger. “That’s too quick.”
“Mallory.”
“He called me nothing,” I said. “He said I was a broke designer. He used my mother’s inheritance to build his company, put his name on my work, brought my best friend into my bed, broke my ribs, and locked me in the dark.”
My father said nothing.
“I don’t want him dead,” I continued. “I want him alive long enough to watch every lie he built collapse. I want his money gone. His company gone. His reputation gone. I want every person who laughed at me to choke on my name.”
For a moment, the room was silent.
Then Dominic Romano smiled.
It was not warm.
It was proud.
“There she is,” he said softly. “My daughter.”
He opened a leather folder on my blanket. Inside were bank statements, corporate filings, property records, and photographs.
“My people have been watching Hayes Construction for years,” he said. “Your husband’s company is overleveraged. Their East River development is full of fraudulent safety reports. Barrett has been moving money through Atlantic City casinos. Three million dollars, maybe more.”
I looked at the documents, and pain sharpened into purpose.
“Why were you watching them?”
My father’s smile vanished. “Later.”
“I need to know.”
“Later,” he repeated. “For now, heal. Then we destroy them legally, publicly, permanently.”
A knock sounded at the door.
A tall man in a tailored navy suit entered. He had dark blond hair, wire-rimmed glasses, and eyes that saw too much without showing off.
“Wesley Croft,” my father said. “He manages my legitimate investments. Numbers, acquisitions, pressure campaigns. If revenge has an architect, it’s him.”
Wesley looked at me, then at the folder. “Mrs. Hayes, I’m sorry for what happened to you.”
“Don’t be sorry,” I said. “Be useful.”
His mouth twitched. “That I can do.”
Three days later, Barrett came to my hospital room carrying carnations from a grocery store.
He looked ruined.
Not by guilt.
By fear.
“Mallory,” he whispered. “Your father—he came to see me.”
“I imagine that was unpleasant.”
He swallowed. “I didn’t mean to hurt you.”
“You kicked me.”
“You slapped Taryn. I lost control.”
I let my face soften. It took effort. “Maybe we both lost control.”
Hope lit his eyes so quickly I almost laughed.
“Does that mean you forgive me?”
I reached for his hand. His fingers were cold.
“I want to come home,” I said. “I want to fix this.”
He nearly cried with relief.
Poor Barrett.
He thought the woman in that hospital bed was crawling back to him.
He did not understand I was returning to bury him from the inside.
I returned to the Greenwich mansion in a motorcade of black cars.
The neighbors pretended not to watch from behind their curtains. Barrett stood on the front steps in a suit that looked slept in, smiling stiffly as Rocco lifted my wheelchair from the limousine. He bent to kiss my cheek, but Rocco stepped between us.
“Not unless she asks,” Rocco said.
Barrett’s smile died.
“I’m fine,” I said sweetly. “Let’s not make this dramatic.”
His mother, Elaine Hayes, waited inside with trembling hands and a casserole dish. Before that week, she had never entered my kitchen except to criticize the staff. Now she fluttered around me like a nervous nurse.
“Oh, Mallory, darling,” she said. “We’re so grateful you’re home. This family needs healing.”
Family.
That word sounded obscene in that house.
Garrett Hayes, Barrett’s father, arrived that evening. He was a handsome man in his late fifties with silver hair, a politician’s smile, and the dead eyes of someone who had survived by sacrificing others.
He kissed my hand.
“My dear,” he said. “What happened between you and Barrett was tragic, but private. Families should solve their wounds behind closed doors.”
I looked into his eyes and thought of the basement door.
“How wise,” I said.
For two weeks, I played the perfect wounded wife.
I let Barrett bring me tea. I thanked Elaine for pillows. I smiled at Garrett’s speeches about unity. I sat in the garden beneath a blanket, sketchbook open on my lap, pretending to draw while Rocco stood beneath the trees and Wesley’s encrypted messages filled my phone.
Barrett was careless because he thought fear had saved him.
Every night, after he left for “late meetings,” I entered his cloud accounts. He had never changed the passwords. Why would he? Men like Barrett believed betrayal was clever only when they committed it.