I was nursing the twins when my husband suddenly said, in a cold voice, “My brother and his family will take your apartment. And you… You’ll sleep in the storage room at my mom’s place…
“It’s marital property now,” Daniel shot back smoothly, crossing his arms over his chest. “And my family is in crisis. You need to be a team player. My mother has generously offered to let us stay in her basement until Mark gets back on his feet.”
“Her basement?” I gasped, the air leaving my lungs. “Daniel, her basement flooded last year! It smells like mildew. The only finished space down there is the old storage room! I have newborn twins! I can’t put them in a damp, windowless storage room!”
Daniel stepped closer, leaning over me. The smell of his cologne was suddenly nauseating. “My brother and his family will take your apartment. And you… you will sleep in the storage room at my mom’s. The twins cry too much for the main house anyway, and I have important meetings this month. I need my sleep. Be grateful you have a roof over your head at all, Emily.”
My hands began to shake violently. I had to grip the armrests of the rocking chair to keep from dropping my sleeping babies. It wasn’t just the sheer, staggering audacity of the demand; it was the chilling, sociopathic indifference in his eyes. He didn’t see me as his wife, the mother of his children, or a human being. He saw me as a piece of luggage he could shove into a closet to make room for his family.
A scream of pure, primal rage began to rise in the back of my throat. I opened my mouth, ready to unleash hell.
But before the sound could escape my lips, the doorbell rang.
A sharp, authoritative buzzzzz.
Daniel let out an annoyed sigh. “That must be Mark dropping off some boxes. Put the kids down and start packing the kitchen, Emily. I’m not repeating myself.”
Daniel turned his back on me and walked to the front door, yanking it open with an arrogant flourish. “Mark, I told you—”
Daniel’s smug face instantly drained of all color, turning a sickly, translucent shade of grey. The arrogant posture collapsed, replaced by a sudden, violent tremor.
Standing in the hallway, radiating a lethal, absolute authority in bespoke Italian suits, were two men.
They weren’t Mark and his wife. They were my older brothers. Ethan and Marcus Walker.
Ethan, thirty-six, was the CEO of a multi-national logistics firm. Marcus, thirty-four, was a senior partner at a cutthroat hedge fund. They were towering, broad-shouldered men who commanded boardrooms with a glance. And right now, they were looking at my husband with the quiet, terrifying intensity of predators cornering their prey.
Marcus stepped over the threshold, not waiting for an invitation. He didn’t look at the apartment. His jaw was tight, a muscle ticking violently near his temple as his dark eyes locked dead onto Daniel.
“Actually,” Marcus said, his voice dropping to a low, dangerous rumble that seemed to vibrate the floorboards. “We need to talk to him.”
