~ Seraphina ~
"How much did she cost, Adrian?"
The words cut through the heavy, suffocating silence of our penthouse like a razor through silk. We had just stepped through the front door, the click of the lock sounding like a gavel. Adrian was already unbuttoning his tuxedo jacket. He stopped, his back to me.
"I don't have the energy for your moods, Seraphina," he said, his voice dropping into that bored, clipped accent he used when he wanted to remind me I was beneath his notice. "It was a long night. We raised three million. Be grateful for the success and go to bed."
"The necklace," I said, my voice rising. "My grandmother's emeralds. I saw them on her neck tonight. I saw you touching them. I saw you touching her."
He turned then, and the look in his eyes wasn't guilt. It was annoyance. He tossed his jacket onto the Italian leather sofa and stepped toward me.
"It was a gift, Sera. Don't be dramatic," he sneered. "You never wear the damn thing anyway. It was sitting in a box gathering dust. I put it to better use."
"You stole from me to deck out your mistress at a public gala. You paraded her in front of me wearing my own history."
"I didn't steal anything," he snapped. "Everything in this house, everything on your body, was paid for by my name and my sweat. You are a Vale because I allowed it. Don't forget where you came from, Seraphina. You were a quiet little girl with a pedigree and no spine. I gave you a throne."
"A throne?" I laughed, the sound jagged and ugly. "This is a cage, Adrian. And tonight, you didn't even bother to lock the door."
He stepped closer, his hand shooting out to grip my chin. His fingers were cold, his thumb pressing hard against my jaw.
"You've been looking tired lately. Frayed," he whispered. "And frankly, you've become boring. This shrill, accusatory version of you? It's exhausting."
He let go of my face with a dismissive flick of his wrist and began to pace.
"Let's be honest with each other," he said. "We've reached an impasse. I have needs. You clearly have a need to play the martyr. So, I have a proposal."
I stood frozen, my heart a leaden weight in my chest. "A proposal?"
"An open marriage."
The words hung in the air like a death sentence.
"I'll keep my 'investments' discreet, and you can do whatever it is you do to occupy your time," he said, waving a hand vaguely. "We keep the public image intact. You stay the perfect Mrs. Vale. I keep the board happy. And in return, I stop pretending I'm coming home to you, and you stop pretending you care."
He leaned against the wet bar, watching me with an expectant smirk. He was waiting for the tears. He was waiting for me to crumble, to beg him for his love, to tell him I would change.
I looked at him—really looked at him. I saw the entitlement, the cruelty, and the utter lack of respect. I thought about the stillness I had felt in the ballroom.
I took a slow, deep breath.
"Fine," I said.
The smirk on Adrian's face wavered, caught between triumph and confusion.
"What?" he asked.
"I said fine," I repeated, my voice steady. "An open marriage. Those are your terms? I agree. Completely."
Adrian straightened up, his hands dropping to his sides. This wasn't the script.
"You... you agree?" he stammered.
"I do," I said, walking toward him. I didn't stop until I was inches away. For the first time, I didn't look down. I looked him straight in his cold, dark eyes. "You want your freedom, Adrian? You have it. But remember—freedom works both ways."
I saw the moment the realization hit him. It was a flicker of genuine shock, followed by a dark shadow of doubt.
"You don't mean that," he said. "You wouldn't know what to do with 'freedom' if it hit you in the face. You're a Vale, Sera. You have a reputation to"
"I have exactly the reputation you've designed for me," I interrupted, a small, sharp smile touching my lips. "And starting tomorrow, I'm going to see what else I can be. Since we're being honest... I'm looking forward to it."
I turned and walked toward the bedroom, my heels clicking with a newfound authority on the marble. I didn't look back.
I knew exactly what his face looked like in that moment. It was the look of a man who had just realized he'd handed his hostage the key to the armory.