The Metropolitan Museum of Art was a glittering beast, its steps swarmed with paparazzi and high society. Inside, the air was thick with the scent of lilies and ambition. Alessandra felt like a ghost haunting a party she was never meant to attend. Florian had forced her into a severe, midnight-blue gown, a beautiful cage that restricted her breathing.
"Smile," he had commanded in the car. "You are Mrs. Mercado tonight. You are an asset. Act like one."
She stood by his side, a silent accessory, as he networked with a predatory grace. She kept her expression neutral, her gaze distant, a perfect porcelain doll. For hours, she endured the curious stares, the whispered questions she couldn't answer.
Then, as Florian was deep in conversation with a senator, a man in a sharp suit approached her. He was flanked by two others who looked like security.
"Mrs. Mercado?" the man asked. His name was Knox Skinner, Florian's lead counsel.
Alessandra looked at him, then glanced toward Florian, but her husband's back was turned. This was planned.
Skinner didn't wait for a response. He placed a leather-bound folder on the small table beside her. "We require your signature."
Flashbulbs erupted from nowhere, blinding her. The low hum of the gala sharpened into a frenzy of clicks. Skinner opened the folder.
It wasn't a business document. It was a legal declaration. A statement attesting to her long-term psychological distress, her "unstable mental condition," citing her selective mutism as a primary symptom. It gave Florian full power of attorney over her affairs, painting her as an unwell child bride he was benevolently protecting.
"You will sign this," Skinner said, his voice low and devoid of emotion, "or these gentlemen will escort you out. The narrative will be that you had a public breakdown. Your choice."
Tears welled in her eyes, hot and furious. This was the ultimate humiliation. Not just to be controlled, but to be publicly branded as broken, as crazy. To have her trauma weaponized against her in front of the entire world.
She looked at Florian across the room. He turned his head slightly, and his eyes met hers for a fraction of a second. They were cold, flat, and merciless. This was his checkmate.
With a hand that trembled with rage, not fear, she took the pen. The cameras flashed, capturing the moment she signed away her own sanity. The security guards stepped forward, their hands gently but firmly taking her elbows.
"This way, ma'am," one of them murmured, guiding her through a side exit, away from the glittering party and into the cold, unforgiving night. She was no longer a guest. She was a liability being disposed of.





