Thrown Into Rain, She Returned With The Notice That Ruined Him-eirian

The red velvet cake had begun to lean by the time the microwave clock turned 11:42 p.m., but Victoria Skye still stood beside the island pretending the night could be rescued.

It was their fifth wedding anniversary, and Victoria had known better than to trust Dominic’s promise, but love has a cruel habit of making intelligent women wait beside cold plates.

Before the money, Dominic had loved her softness and called her his harbor while she worked diner doubles to cover the tuition bill he swore he would repay.

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He paid it back with a house on Oak Street, suits that smelled like private elevators, and a new way of looking at her like she had become the receipt he hated reading.

When the front lock finally turned, Victoria lifted her face with a smile already prepared, because hope can be humiliating before anyone else enters the room.

Dominic stumbled in with his tie loose, his hair damp from rain, and a blonde woman in a red dress hooked around his arm.

For one second Victoria thought she had misunderstood the scene, because the mind will protect itself before the heart can bear the truth.

Dominic solved the confusion with a laugh and said, “Jessica, this is the roommate I told you about,” as if the word wife had spoiled in his mouth.

Jessica looked Victoria up and down with the bored cruelty of someone trying on another woman’s life and finding the old one inconvenient.

“You weren’t kidding,” Jessica said, touching Dominic’s sleeve like a claim. “She really let herself go.”

She told them both to get out of her house, and that single sentence pulled something ugly and stored-up out of Dominic’s face.

He stepped close, jabbed one finger into her shoulder, and reminded her that he paid the mortgage, the lights, and the groceries he accused her of eating.

Victoria whispered that she had paid for his degree, but Dominic was no longer listening to any history in which she had mattered.

He grabbed her arm hard enough to leave the shape of his fingers in fear, dragged her through the foyer, and yanked open the heavy oak door.

The rain came in sideways, cold and sharp, and Victoria saw the stone porch shining like black glass beneath her bare feet.

“A fat embarrassment doesn’t own this house,” Dominic said, and the sentence landed harder than the shove that followed.

She hit the porch with both hands out, stunned more by the warm light behind him than by the cold under her knees.

Jessica laughed from the hallway, small and bright, while Dominic stood above Victoria as if he had won something by making his wife small.

Then he said, “Get out,” and shut the door with a violence that made the wreath jump against the wood.

The deadbolt turned, and the whole marriage became a sound on the other side of a locked door.

Victoria pounded until her palms burned, called his name until the rain filled her mouth, and begged once for her coat before shame stopped her from begging again.

No phone sat in her hand, no purse hung from her shoulder, and no shoes protected her from the freezing pavement when she finally walked down the steps.

She moved through streets where the houses watched with blank expensive windows, then past storefronts with security gates pulled down like teeth.

By the time she reached the industrial edge of the city, her feet had lost feeling, her hair was pasted to her cheeks, and the thin nightgown had become a second skin of ice.

Under a railway overpass, she stopped because her body simply refused another block.

Three men came out from behind a concrete pillar, and the tallest one laughed when Victoria said she had no money.

“We don’t want money,” he said, reaching toward her shoulder, and Victoria understood that Dominic had not only thrown her out of a house.

He had thrown her into danger and gone to bed.

Headlights cut across the underpass before the man’s hand touched her.

A black SUV stopped so close that muddy water jumped over the curb, and four men in dark coats stepped out with silent, practiced speed.

The men who had cornered Victoria suddenly looked like boys who had wandered into the wrong room.

The rear door opened last, and Aiden Moretti stepped into the rain.

People in Chicago whispered his name carefully, the way people speak around matches in a room full of gasoline.

Victoria knew none of that yet.

She only saw a tall man in a charcoal overcoat staring at her face with such shock that his anger seemed to arrive late.

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