
“It’s divine retribution,” Nick said smoothly as he held the car door for me.
“Blood answers blood.”
He handed me a tablet. On the screen, a lavish banquet glittered with lights and gold. “The Stonewell family’s birthday gala,” he murmured. “Tonight they crown Marissa Lane as ‘Queen of Seaside City.’”
Marissa.
The maid who’d served me for twenty years… and then destroyed my entire life.
“This crown,” Nick added, catching my reflection in the window, “was meant for you.”
He swiped to the next screen. “They prepared three ‘gifts’ for your release. Want to guess?”
After five years on a cement bunk, sitting in a luxury car felt surreal.
“Nothing pleasant,” I said.
“First gift: a razor. You’re to shave your head and join a convent for five years of ‘penance.’
Second: a ten-thousand-word confession to memorize and recite onstage tonight, to prove your ‘remorse.’
And lastly—” his voice hardened “—the deed to Ashridge Estate. The only property you kept for your biological daughter, Lila. They want you to sign it over to Marissa.”
“They dare,” I whispered.
The fury inside me wasn’t wild. It was ice. Sharp. Controlled.
Ashridge was all I had left to give Lila.
“So,” I said, watching the glowing hotel tower approach, “my appearance is just part of their performance.”
I straightened my crimson gown.
“If they prepared three gifts, I’ll return three surprises. Let’s go meet my ‘husband.’”
As we pulled in, I saw Lila and her husband, Evan Carter, pleading with a guard.
“Please,” Lila begged. “An inmate named Elaine Mercer was released today. Where is she?”
“She’s gone,” the guard replied.
Lila crumpled. “Evan, what if something happened? Mom never wanted to see me…”
“She’s not avoiding you,” Evan said. “She’s avoiding the Stonewells. And we’ll settle that score tonight.”
“Our family deserves justice,” Lila whispered.
“A tiny family like the Stonewells?” he said coldly. “They’re nothing.”
I stayed hidden. My war was not theirs—not yet.
Inside the ballroom, whispers rose instantly.
“Big night for the Stonewells.”
“Marissa’s coronation.”
“The daughters are stunning…”
I crossed the marble floor in a blood-red gown—Marissa’s custom dress, made originally for me.
At the center, my husband of twenty-eight years, Gregory Stonewell, adjusted Marissa’s earring, fingers lingering far too long.
Marissa spotted me and went pale.
Gregory’s daughters—whom I’d raised like my own—gasped.
“Who let you wear that?” Hazel cried.
I smiled. “Does it offend you?”
Gregory finally turned. His face hardened. “Take that off, Elaine.”
Guests murmured.
“Who is she?”
“Why is she in the matriarch’s gown?”
I lifted my chin. “You want to know who I am?”
“Gregory,” an associate called, uneasy, “she’s not… a mistress, is she?”
“I’m Elaine Mercer,” I said, voice steady.
“Legally married to Gregory Stonewell. The true Mrs. Stonewell. The real matriarch.”
The room gasped.
“Then she—?” someone pointed to Marissa.
“A maid,” I said calmly.
Marissa shrieked, “Elaine! Are you humiliating me?”
“You held a coronation for a servant,” I replied. “And you call me the disgrace?”
“Enough,” Hazel snapped. “You went to prison and now want attention? Go home.”
“We prepared three gifts,” Marissa said sweetly. “Accept them and this family might give you a second chance.”
“Funny,” I replied. “I brought surprises too.”
She gestured for the servants.
“First: your ten-thousand-word apology. You’ll kneel and recite it now.”
“Second: shave your head. Begin your five-year penance.”
“Third: sign Ashridge Estate over to me.”
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I laughed. “You call that mercy?”
Gregory shouted, “We send you an allowance every month, and you return to disgrace us?”
“Allowance?” I asked. “I get a hundred dollars.”
Gregory looked stunned. “Your stipend is a hundred thousand. Marissa sends it.”
Marissa panicked, pulling a crumpled bill from her purse. The finance manager was dragged forward. Under pressure, he confessed: Marissa received 1.1 million monthly, including my full allowance.
Gasps filled the room.
“A maid earns a million?” a guest scoffed. “The Stonewells are billionaires.”
Marissa snapped, “Even if that’s true, what about her hitting me with a car?”
I said evenly, “Security footage solves that, doesn’t it?”
Surprise one.
Gregory tried to regain control. “Take the gifts and leave.”
Marissa clutched his arm. “She should know the truth.”
Gregory exhaled heavily. “Marissa… is the girls’ biological mother. Not you.”
Twenty years of motherhood—reduced to servitude.
“Does saying it make you proud?” I asked softly.
Before they could respond—
“Who said she has no one?” a furious voice rang out.
The crowd parted.
Lila walked in with Evan.
She ran to me. “Mom.”
“Lila,” I breathed. “I thought I’d lost you.”
She knelt.
“One bow for giving me life.”
A second.
“One for guiding me.”
A third.
“And one for teaching me dignity. You’re my only mother.”
Then she faced the Stonewells, eyes blazing.
“For twenty years my mother slave-worked in your home. You stole her money, framed her, and threw her in prison. And you dare humiliate her now?”
Gasps echoed.
“And since you prepared birthday gifts,” she said, “I brought gifts too.”
The doors opened:
A custom Rolls-Royce
Ten kilos of gold
The deed to Ashridge Estate
“And one more.” She squeezed my hand. “I called the police. The ‘accident’ from five years ago is being reopened.”
Officers entered.
Marissa panicked. Her daughter Ivy lied. I let them.
Then I lifted a small USB.
“Surprise two.”
The footage appeared on the massive screen: someone crouched by my car, severing the brake lines.
“Zoom in.”
Marissa’s face appeared.
The ballroom erupted. Officers cuffed her.
Gregory and the daughters dropped to their knees, begging. They offered money, apologies, even themselves.
They produced one last “weapon”—an old contract. Not a marriage certificate. A servitude contract I’d signed at eighteen, thinking it was legal marriage.
I was never a wife.
Just property.
Marissa laughed, bragging about staging my “rescue” years ago.
I grabbed her throat. “If you want to die, say so.”
Gregory tore me off. “Violence solves nothing.”
“You’re right,” I said. “Prison taught me that. I’m dropping the lawsuit. Prison is too kind. I’d rather watch you fall slowly.”
Marissa sneered. “And your status will do that?”
She didn’t know my third surprise.
The emcee called for Hart Corporation’s representative.
Evan Carter stepped forward.
Behind him entered the directors of Crimson Phoenix Group, led by its infamous CEO, Damon Cross.
The hall darkened.
The spotlight hit the stage.
I stepped forward and accepted the appointment letter.
“The board of Crimson Phoenix,” Damon announced, “welcomes our new chairwoman—Elaine Mercer, Queen of Seaside City!”
Gasps. Cameras. Panic.
Half the Stonewell fortune—donated to buy Marissa the crown—now sat under my signature.
Damon revealed Ashridge had been vandalized; the Stonewells were charged with trespassing and property damage. Their last bank card was confiscated.
Later came the villa incident, the smashed cars, the medical files revealing Marissa’s HIV and other diseases, the fraud charges, the evidence tampering, the hit-and-run that left Ivy disabled, and Gregory’s death from untreated AIDS.
Marissa still screamed that I had ruined her.
At the hospital, police arrested her.
“Ms. Marissa Lane,” the officer said, “you are charged with framing, attempted murder, and felony hit-and-run.”
I pulled the razor—their first “gift”—from my bag and tossed it at her feet.
“This was meant for me,” I told her. “Keep it. Our paths end here.”
On my way out, I passed the room where Gregory’s body lay under a sheet.
A nurse stepped out. “Are you family of the deceased?”
I didn’t look inside.
“No,” I said.
“You’ve got the wrong woman.”