Flaunting My Ring? Too Bad Your Man Is My Husband—and I Hold the Pen to His Fortune! Chapter 09
Severin’s POV
The photos landed on my desk.
Mirella laughing with a shipping magnate
from a rival company. Mirella slipping her
number to a real estate developer with
gambling debts. Mirella getting into the car
of a midlevel politician. Disgusting.
I let her sit for a month. Let her think she’d
gotten away with it. Let her build a false
sense of security.
Then I brought her to my office and laid the
photos out in a row.
She went pale. “Severin, I can explain-”
“Nothing to explain.”
“You broke the most basic rule. Loyalty. In this family, betrayal has consequences.”
“We’re married!”
“The prenup. There are clauses. You broke
them.”
I slid a paper across the desk.
“Sign this. You take nothing from the family.
Leave with the clothes on your back and a
oneway ticket. Go wherever you want. Just
not on my territory.”
“You can’t do this! I’m your wife!”
“By the end of today, you won’t be.”
She fell to her knees and grabbed the edge of
my desk.
“Please, Severin! I’m sorry! I was wrong! I
was so lonely! You never… you never even
looked at me! Please, don’t do this! I have
nothing!”
I looked down at her. The woman who’d cost
me everything. There was no pity in my eyes.
Only cold emptiness.
“You should’ve thought of that before you
ran Elara over,” I said quietly.
Her face went white.
“Bruno,” I called. The door opened.
“See the lady out. Make sure she takes only
what’s legally hers.”
“What does that mean?”
She screamed and fought as they dragged
her out. I listened to her cries echo down the
hallway until a door slammed shut.
Silence.
Later, my men reported she was living in a
rundown studio on the other side of town.
She tried to find receptionist work, but had
no references. She maxed out her last
personal credit card. Within weeks, she was
kneeling on the sidewalk outside the family
compound every day, begging the guards to
let her see me, let her talk to me. The
security cameras caught it all.
I watched her on the monitor. Face streaked
with tears. Cheap makeup. Ragged clothes. It
brought me no comfort. Just a deeper,
heavier exhaustion.
I stopped going home. I worked from the penthouse–where Elara’s fading perfume still hung in the air.
The family business started falling apart. I couldn’t focus. The ruthless drive that had built our empire died the day Elara walked
out of that bus station.
Decisions stalled. Opportunities slipped. Competitors got bolder. I didn’t care.
Let it burn. The money was running out.
Seeing their Don losing his edge, loyal soldiers started looking for safer masters.
One morning, men I’d trusted for years
smuggled a shipment and cut me out of my
share.
A direct provocation. I didn’t retaliate.
“It’s over.”
Word spread fast. Severin had fallen.
Vultures swarmed. Legitimate businesses
were raided, left in ruins. Illegal operations.
were hijacked. Territory was carved up.
A quiet, sudden collapse. The final blow
didn’t come from a rival family. It came
from the bank. The old mansion was seized. Assets were liquidated.
I sat in the penthouse living room,
surrounded by moving boxes. I couldn’t be bothered to pack.
I just watched the dust float in the sunlight.
Mirella showed up on the last day. She stood on the sidewalk, watching the movers load the last of the furniture onto the truck. She was gaunt, her eyes hollow. She saw me walk out emptyhanded.
Our eyes met across the distance. I saw a horrible understanding dawn in her face.
It was over.
The grand ending. Not a kingdom. Ruins.
Everything. The schemes. The betrayals. The
cruelties. All of it led to this.
The empty sidewalk. The uncertain future.
Her legs gave way. She crumpled onto the
dirty concrete, a heap of faded ambition and
regret.
I turned and walked away.
I didn’t look back. There was nothing worth looking back at.
Just like when Elara left.
I heard she’d started a new career. She was
doing well.
She won’t look back.
She left me with nothing but ruins.

