Chapter Two: The Woman He Didn’t Know
Damon sat in his car for an hour.
A 2023 Mercedes. Black. Bulletproof. A reminder of the life he couldn’t escape.
The engine was off. The parking garage was silent. A single fluorescent light flickered above him.
He stared at the concrete wall.
His hands were steady on the steering wheel. But inside, everything was breaking.
Vivian had signed a prenuptial agreement five years ago. His lawyers had insisted. Her lawyers had reviewed it.
He had barely glanced at it.
He was in love. Blind. Stupid. He would have signed anything.
Now he wondered what was in it.
His phone buzzed.
Vivian: Where are you? I thought you were coming.
He stared at the screen.
The words blurred. Then cleared. Then blurred again.
His thumb hovered over the keyboard.
He thought about the woman he married. The way she laughed at his terrible jokes. The way she held his face in her hands and promised forever.
He thought about the past six months. The cold shoulder. The distance. The phone calls she took in the bathroom.
He typed: Got held up. Board meeting ran late. I’ll come tomorrow.
It was the first lie he had ever told her.
Five years of marriage. Zero lies.
Until now.
The lie sat in his chest like a stone.
She replied: Okay. Love you.
He didn’t respond.
He started the car and drove home.
The penthouse was in the Loop. Floor-to-ceiling windows. Private elevator. Security detail that never left.
Everything looked different now.
The furniture they had picked together at that boutique on Michigan Avenue. The photos from their honeymoon in Santorini — her in a white dress, him in linen, both of them smiling like fools.
The kitchen where she cooked pasta on Sundays while he watched football. Where they danced slow at midnight to no music.
It all felt like a stage set.
Like a movie he had been starring in without knowing the script.
He poured himself a whiskey. Neat. Double.
The glass was crystal. Wedding gift from her aunt.
He drank it in one swallow.
Then he opened his laptop.
He searched for Vance Capital’s valuation.
The screen glowed in the dark penthouse.
Eleanor hadn’t been exaggerating. The company was worth approximately $120 million on paper. Vivian’s third was roughly $40 million.
He searched for the prenup. Found the PDF in his email from five years ago.
He read it carefully.
His stomach turned.
The document was brutal. He would get nothing. No spousal support. No property division. No claim to her inheritance.
His business, Cross Industries, was separate. Protected.
But the house they lived in — owned by Vivian’s trust. The cars — leased through her family’s company. Even his watch, a Patek Philippe she had given him for their third anniversary — purchased with trust funds.
He had contributed his own money to their joint accounts. Nearly $2 million over five years. But under the prenup, that was considered a gift.
He owned nothing.
He had built a billion-dollar empire from blood and sweat. His company employed three thousand people. His charitable foundation had donated millions.
And his wife’s family had structured their marriage so that he could walk away with the clothes on his back.
His phone rang.
David Ochoa. His oldest friend. Former bodyguard. Now head of security.
“Boss. You okay? You missed dinner with the investors.”
Damon’s voice was flat. “David. I need a favor.”
“Anything.”
“I need you to look into something. Quietly. No paper trail.”
“Whose?”
“Vivian’s family. Vance Capital. Their finances. And any connection to a law firm that might have drafted a prenup five years ago.”
Silence.
The kind of silence that lasted too long.
“Boss. That’s your wife.”
“I know.”
“Are you sure about this?”
Damon looked at the penthouse. At the life he thought he had built. At the photo of Vivian on his desk — her smile bright, her eyes warm.
He didn’t feel warm anymore.
“I’m not sure about anything anymore.”