The Master’s Return
When I walked back into the living room, Caleb didn’t even look up at first. He was leaning over Chanel, whisper-laughing into her ear.
“Ah, the dog returns,” Caleb said, throwing a careless wave in my direction. “Did you clear your head, or are you still feeling ‘fragile’? Go fix us some drinks. Chanel likes gin and tonics. Use the good gin, not the cheap stuff you usually buy.”
“Of course, Caleb,” I said quietly, keeping my eyes cast downward. I walked toward the kitchen, but stopped just at the edge of the kitchen island, turning to face them. “I just wanted to make sure everything was in order before dinner.”
“Everything is fine, just do what you’re told,” he snapped, his irritation flaring because I wasn’t moving fast enough.
Right on cue, Caleb’s phone vibrated violently on the coffee table. Then Chanel’s phone buzzed. Then the central smart-hub on the kitchen wall chimed with a harsh, red alert notification.
Caleb frowned, reaching for his phone. “What the hell is this?”
I stood perfectly still, watching his face.
He unlocked his screen. The arrogant, smug smirk he had worn for the last half hour instantly froze. The color began to drain from his cheeks, turning a sickly, pale grey. He blinked rapidly, tapping the screen frantically, but the phone was completely unresponsive to his touches, locked on a single, full-screen text document.
It was a real-time ledger of his bank accounts. As he watched, the balances dropped.
-
$420,000…
-
$180,000…
-
$15,000…
-
$0.00.
“What… what is this? This is a glitch,” Caleb muttered, his voice losing its booming authority, replaced by a sudden, pathetic tremor. “Chanel, check your phone. Is the Wi-Fi down?”
Chanel was staring at her screen in absolute horror. “Caleb… my dad just texted me. He… he sent a screenshot of… oh my god. He says he’s cutting off my tuition and cutting me out of the estate. How does he know about us? He says he got an anonymous email with all our hotel receipts!”
“Hold on, hold on!” Caleb panicked, standing up so fast he knocked over his glass of Macallan. The expensive whiskey spilled across the table, soaking into the wood, but he didn’t even notice. He hurriedly dialed his office. “Let me call Mark. There’s a hack. The firm must be experiencing a cyberattack.”
He put the phone to his ear. It didn’t ring. Instead, a robotic voice played through his speaker loud enough for the entire room to hear:
“We are sorry. This line has been restricted by the account administrator. To reactivate services, please contact Apex Digital Holdings.”
Caleb froze. His head snapped up, his eyes darting around the room like a trapped animal. “Apex? Who the hell is Apex? We don’t use them…”
Suddenly, the massive 85-inch smart television on the wall turned on by itself. The screen didn’t show Netflix or the cable news. It showed a crisp, high-definition live stream of the street outside our house.
A heavy-duty flatbed tow truck had just pulled up directly behind Caleb’s Aston Martin. Two men in uniform got out, hooked up the front tires of his beloved sports car, and began winching it up onto the bed of the truck.
“Hey! Hey, stop!” Caleb screamed, running toward the floor-to-ceiling windows, banging his fists against the glass. “That’s my car! What are they doing?! Call the police, Elena! Call the damn police!”
I didn’t move an inch. I just stood by the kitchen island, hands folded neatly in front of me, watching him unravel.
“Elena! Did you hear me?!” he roared, turning around to face me, his face twisted in a mixture of rage and sheer terror. “Are you deaf? Call the cops! Someone is stealing my car, my accounts are wiped, and—”
He stopped mid-sentence.
Because for the first time in our five years of marriage, I wasn’t looking at the floor. I was looking directly into his eyes. And I was smiling.
The Cold Truth
The sheer weight of my gaze seemed to physically hit him. The meek, compliant woman he thought he could trample over had completely disappeared. In her place stood someone entirely foreign, someone whose presence filled the room with an icy, suffocating authority.
“The police won’t help you, Caleb,” I said. My voice wasn’t a whisper anymore. It was smooth, measured, and dangerously calm.
“What… what did you say?” he stammered, taking a involuntary step back, his instincts finally screaming at him that he was in deep danger.
“I said, the police won’t help you,” I repeated, walking slowly out from behind the kitchen island. With every step I took toward him, Caleb took a step back, until his knees hit the edge of the sofa. Chanel looked between the two of us, completely bewildered and terrified by the sudden shift in the air. “They won’t help because the repossession of that vehicle is entirely legal. The corporate lease was terminated exactly two minutes ago due to non-payment.”
“How… how do you know that?” Caleb’s voice was barely a whisper now. He looked at me as if I had suddenly grown horns. “Who told you that?”
“Nobody told me, Caleb. I did it.”
I pulled a sleek, encrypted tablet from the pocket of my cardigan—the only device in the house still connected to the outside world. I tapped the screen once, and the television display shifted from the tow truck outside to a massive, corporate document.
At the very top of the document was the logo for his architectural firm.
Directly below it, in bold, undeniable letters, was a corporate resolution:
Caleb stared at the screen, his mouth hanging open. He shook his head violently. “No. No, this is impossible. Apex is a global tech firm. They own half the commercial real estate downtown. They don’t care about a mid-sized architecture firm! You’re lying, you made this up, you’re just a—”
“A sick little dog?” I interrupted, my voice sharp as a razor blade.
I tapped the tablet again. The screen changed one more time, displaying the master registration profile for Apex Digital Holdings. There, listed under the legal name of the sole founder, chairperson, and 100% owner of the multi-billion-dollar empire, was a single name.
Elena Vance.
The silence that followed was absolute. You could hear the faint sound of the tow truck driving away outside, carrying Caleb’s pride and joy with it.
Chanel looked at the screen, then at me, her eyes widening to the size of saucers. “Caleb…” she whimpered, clutching his arm, but her grip wasn’t tight this time—it was trembling. “Caleb, who is she? What is happening?”
Caleb couldn’t answer. He couldn’t breathe. He looked at the document, then looked down at my tablet, and finally looked at me. The realization hit him like a physical blow to the chest. The woman he had insulted, the woman he thought was living off his charity, was the very person who dictated his entire existence.
“You…” Caleb choked out, his knees trembling. “You make… you’re Apex? All this time? The trust fund… the freelance work…”
“A calculated narrative,” I said smoothly, stepping right up to him. I was shorter than him, but in that moment, I looked down on him like an apex predator looking at a insect. “I wanted a quiet life, Caleb. I wanted to see if you loved me for who I was, or what I could provide. It took you less than two years to show your true colors. But today? Today you brought a child into my home and called me a dog.
I leaned in closer, my voice dropping to a deadly whisper. “You have exactly sixty seconds to get out of my house before the automated security systems flag you both as violent trespassers. And trust me, the security team I hire doesn’t use rubber bullets.”
“Elena, please!” Caleb suddenly dropped to his knees, his hands reaching out to grab the hem of my sweater, tears of pure panic springing to his eyes. “I was stupid! I was showing off! Chanel means nothing to me, I swear! I love you, I’ve always loved you! We can fix this, please don’t do this to me!”
Behind him, Chanel gasped, realizing she had just been discarded like trash. “Caleb! You piece of—”
“Shut up, Chanel!” Caleb screamed back at her, completely desperate now, begging at my feet. “Elena, listen to me, you can’t throw me out! I have nowhere to go! My accounts are empty!”
Leave a Comment