He Chose The Mistress, Losing His True Queen

He Chose The Mistress, Losing His True Queen

Lively

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I was the Architect who built the digital fortress for the most feared Don in New York. To the world, I was Brendan Wiggins's silent, elegant Queen. But then my burner phone buzzed under the dinner table. It was a photo from his mistress: a positive pregnancy test. "Your husband is celebrating right now," the caption read. "You are just the furniture." I looked across the table at Brendan. He smiled and held my hand, lying to my face without blinking. He thought he owned me because he saved my life ten years ago. He told her I was just "functional." That I was a barren asset he kept around to look respectable, while she carried his legacy. He thought I would accept the disrespect because I had nowhere else to go. He was wrong. I didn't want to divorce him-you don't divorce a Don. And I didn't want to kill him. That was too easy. I wanted to erase him. I liquidated fifty million dollars from the offshore accounts only I could access. I destroyed the servers I had built. Then, I contacted a black-market chemist for a procedure called "Tabula Rasa." It doesn't kill the body. It wipes the mind clean. A total hard reset of the soul. On his birthday, while he was out celebrating his bastard son, I drank the vial. When he finally came home to find the empty house and the melted wedding ring, he realized the truth. He could burn the world down looking for me, but he would never find his wife. Because the woman who loved him no longer existed.

Chapter 1

I was the Architect who built the digital fortress for the most feared Don in New York.

To the world, I was Brendan Wiggins's silent, elegant Queen.

But then my burner phone buzzed under the dinner table.

It was a photo from his mistress: a positive pregnancy test.

"Your husband is celebrating right now," the caption read. "You are just the furniture."

I looked across the table at Brendan. He smiled and held my hand, lying to my face without blinking.

He thought he owned me because he saved my life ten years ago.

He told her I was just "functional." That I was a barren asset he kept around to look respectable, while she carried his legacy.

He thought I would accept the disrespect because I had nowhere else to go.

He was wrong.

I didn't want to divorce him-you don't divorce a Don.

And I didn't want to kill him. That was too easy.

I wanted to erase him.

I liquidated fifty million dollars from the offshore accounts only I could access. I destroyed the servers I had built.

Then, I contacted a black-market chemist for a procedure called "Tabula Rasa."

It doesn't kill the body. It wipes the mind clean. A total hard reset of the soul.

On his birthday, while he was out celebrating his bastard son, I drank the vial.

When he finally came home to find the empty house and the melted wedding ring, he realized the truth.

He could burn the world down looking for me, but he would never find his wife.

Because the woman who loved him no longer existed.

Chapter 1

Ellery POV

The burner phone screen flared to life inside the hollowed-out core of *The Odyssey*, casting a harsh blue light against the paper.

It glowed with a picture that shattered my world: a positive pregnancy test.

Beneath it, a caption read: *Your husband is celebrating right now, and you are just the furniture he keeps around to look respectable.*

I looked across the expanse of the mahogany dinner table at Brendan Wiggins.

He was the most feared Don in New York, and currently, he was slicing into his rare steak with the same surgical precision he used to dismantle rival syndicates.

He smiled at me.

It was that charming, lethal smile-the one that had convinced the Commission he was a civilized businessman, rather than a butcher who ruled the underworld with a blood-soaked iron fist.

"Everything is fine, Ellery," he said.

His voice was a low rumble, a sound that used to make my toes curl but now only made my stomach turn.

He was lying.

I knew he was lying because I wasn't just his wife; I was the one who built his empire's digital fortress.

I knew exactly where his GPS signal had been twenty minutes ago.

It hadn't been at the office.

It had been pinging from a luxury condo in the Upper East Side, a property I had personally purchased through a shell company for a loyal soldier's daughter named Kiya.

I was the Architect of the Wiggins Syndicate.

I designed the labyrinthine money laundering schemes that transmuted cocaine cash into pristine real estate assets.

I built the security systems that kept the FBI out and the bodies effectively hidden.

I was the orphan he had plucked from a burning car wreck ten years ago, the genius girl he had groomed to be his silent, perfect wife.

I was supposed to be his Queen.

But tonight, watching the red juice pool on his china plate, I realized I wasn't his partner.

I was just another asset he managed.

And assets could be replaced.

My phone vibrated against my thigh under the table, a phantom buzz against the silk of my dress.

Another text from Kiya.

A video this time.

I didn't need to open it to know what it contained, but the masochistic urge for confirmation drove me to my feet.

I excused myself, my legs feeling heavy and mechanical as I walked to the bathroom of the fortress I had designed for us.

I locked the door and sank onto the edge of the marble tub.

I played the video.

The sound was low, but the voices were unmistakable.

"She is just functional," Brendan's voice said.

It sounded tinny through the speaker, yet clear as a gunshot in an empty room.

"She keeps the books and the house, Kiya. You keep me warm."

I stared at my reflection in the vanity mirror.

I saw the woman he had created.

Elegant.

Silent.

Loyal to the point of stupidity.

The *Omerta*-the code of silence-was the only religion I had ever known.

I had kept his secrets buried deep.

I had washed blood out of his Egyptian cotton shirts.

I had looked the other way when he came home smelling of gunpowder and cheap perfume.

But a child?

A bastard heir with a woman I had treated like a little sister?

That wasn't just a betrayal of our marriage vows.

It was a violation of the hierarchy.

It was a breach of contract.

Brendan Wiggins didn't love me.

He owned me.

He believed he held the deed to my life simply because he had saved it once.

He treated me like a monument to his own power: perfect, cold, and enduring.

But monuments could be toppled.

I wiped the single tear that had escaped my eye, smearing it away with a thumb.

I didn't sob.

I didn't scream.

Instead, I felt a cold, clinical detachment settle over me-the same icy mindset I used when I was restructuring offshore accounts to dodge federal indictments.

I washed my hands.

I reapplied my lipstick, turning my mouth into a crimson slash.

I walked back into the dining room and sat down.

"Is everything alright, my love?" Brendan asked, reaching across the table to take my hand.

His grip was possessive, heavy with the weight of the gold ring on his finger.

"Everything is perfect," I said.

I lied better than he did.

Because while he was thinking about his mistress and his unborn bastard, I was already calculating the liquidation value of the accounts only I had access to.

I wasn't going to divorce him.

You don't divorce a Don.

You escape him.

And to escape a man who owned the police, the judges, and half the city, I couldn't just leave.

I had to die.

Not physically.

But Ellery Rich, the Don's wife, had to cease to exist.

I looked at the steak knife in his hand, glinting under the chandelier.

I didn't want to kill him.

I wanted to do something worse.

I wanted to erase him.

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