Pregnant Wife Saved A Stranger In The Rain—Then His Folder Took Her Husband’s Empire Apart-thuyhien

Rodrigo stepped onto the porch, and the color left his face.

The man in the navy suit stayed kneeling in front of me, my ruined cashmere coat spread over my shoulders like a shield. Rain ran from the stitched bandage over his eyebrow to his jaw. His hands were bruised. His breathing was uneven. But every man behind him stood still, waiting for him to speak.

Rodrigo’s mouth opened once.

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Nothing came out.

The man beside me looked up at him.

“Good morning, Mr. Vale.”

That voice was not loud. It didn’t need to be.

Rodrigo gripped the porch railing so hard his knuckles turned white. Camilla appeared behind him in my emerald robe, her hair twisted over one shoulder, one hand frozen at her throat. Rodrigo’s mother stood farther back in the marble doorway, pearls bright against her robe, lips pressed flat.

“Who are you?” Rodrigo asked.

The man rose slowly. One of the suited men stepped forward as if to help him, but he lifted one bruised hand and the man stopped.

“My name is Nathaniel Cross.”

Rodrigo blinked.

The name hit him before the rain did.

Camilla whispered something I couldn’t hear, but Rodrigo’s head snapped toward her so fast her face went white.

The man with the folder walked past me and stopped at the foot of the mansion steps. He wore black gloves, a gray coat, and the calm face of someone who had ruined richer men before breakfast.

“Rodrigo Vale,” he said, “this property is now under emergency preservation order pending investigation by the New York Attorney General’s Office.”

Rodrigo swallowed.

“This is private property.”

“Not anymore.”

The folder opened.

Even from the ground, I saw the top page. Vale Meridian Holdings. Asset Preservation. Fraud Inquiry. Witness Tampering. Emergency Injunction.

The words blurred through rain and exhaustion.

Rodrigo stepped down one stair.

“You have no idea who you’re threatening.”

Nathaniel smiled without warmth.

“I do. That’s why I came in three vehicles.”

One of Rodrigo’s guards reached for his radio. A suited man beside the SUV tilted his head once. The guard slowly removed his hand and placed both palms where everyone could see them.

The iron gate remained open.

For the first time since I had entered that house as Rodrigo’s wife, the gate was not obeying him.

My body gave a sharp warning. A pull low in my belly. I pressed both hands there and tried to breathe through it.

Nathaniel saw.

His expression changed.

“Get her inside the vehicle.”

I shook my head.

“No.”

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