The silence lasted eleven minutes. Eleonora counted, watching the digital clock on her microwave, waiting for the adrenaline to subside, for her hands to steady, for the certainty to solidify into plan.
Jace's threats replayed in fragments. Zero resources. No education. Gig economy. Survival without infrastructure. Each insult had landed with the precision of long observation, the careful study he had devoted to her weaknesses, her dependencies, her cage.
He had never studied her strengths.
She retrieved the laptop from beneath the bed, the machine's casing scratched, its stickers faded, its specifications obsolete by any standard Jace would recognize. She opened it on the kitchen counter and waited for the boot sequence, the fan's protest gradually settling into function.
The browser opened to a blank page. She typed an address she had memorized years ago, a string of numbers and letters that meant nothing to surveillance algorithms, everything to her. The connection routed through three proxy servers- Zurich, Singapore, Reykjavik- each layer stripping identification, each jump adding latency she found comforting.
The final destination loaded. Cayman National Private Bank. Welcome, The Shepherd.
The login required a two-step verification. After her password, a prompt appeared for a secondary code. From a hidden seam in the lining of her old trench coat, she retrieved a small, credit-card-thin hardware key. She pressed a nearly invisible button on its surface, and a six-digit code glowed on its tiny screen. She typed it in.
Verification complete.
The account summary loaded. She watched the numbers populate, the balance updating in real time, the final figure stabilizing with mathematical certainty.
$45,800,000.00
Forty-five million, eight hundred thousand dollars. Prize money from European circuits she had dominated between ages nineteen and twenty-six, before Jace, before marriage, before the deliberate construction of her own helplessness. The Shepherd. The nickname earned in Monaco, in Monte Carlo, in the underground tracks where billionaires bet on machinery and nerve.
She had never touched it. Had allowed Jace to believe her dependent, her prenup the only financial security she possessed. The performance had been total, her submission so complete that even she had sometimes forgotten the depth of her hidden foundation.
She initiated a transfer. One million dollars to a New York-based account she maintained under a shell corporation, accessible through debit cards and wire transfers and the mundane machinery of legitimate commerce. Enough for legal fees. Enough for survival. Enough to prove Jace Franco wrong about every assumption he had made.
The confirmation arrived. She closed the laptop and walked to the bathroom, the space so small she could touch both walls with outstretched arms. She turned the shower to maximum heat and stepped beneath the spray, fully clothed, the trench coat and hospital gown and underwear becoming sodden weight that she peeled away in layers.
The water ran brown with dust and blood and the residue of three years. She scrubbed until her skin pinked, until the heat began to fade, until the tank's capacity reached its limit and the spray turned cold.
In the mirror, fogged and streaked, she found her face. The cheekbones sharper than memory. The eyes darker, older, but clear. The mouth set in a line that resembled determination.
From the medicine cabinet, she retrieved scissors. The blades were dull, designed for trimming nails rather than hair, but they functioned. She gathered the length Jace had preferred- the dark waves he had once called her best feature- and cut.
The sound was decisive. Severed strands fell into the sink, black against porcelain, a year's growth, two years, the accumulated weight of his preferences. She cut again, shaping, evening, until what remained brushed her jawline, framed her face, revealed the architecture beneath the decoration.
She looked like herself. Like the girl who had raced through European nights, who had earned millions through courage and calculation, who had survived detention centers and foster systems and every system designed to break her.
The girl who had survived Jace Franco.





