LOGINIsabel Queens chose love over her legacy. She wanted a fairytale ending with her Prince Charming, Leo Hunters, even if it was going to cost her everything. Her perfect marriage to Leo crashed when he started maltreating her, abusing her, cheating on her and finally requested to open up their marriage. Isabel was scorned. The man she abandoned her family for and walked away from her legacy ended up stabbing her in the back in the most brutal way possible. She was twisted with revenge, vowing to get back her pound of flesh. Thus, she accepted to open up her marriage and made sure he witnessed her getting banged by three hot male billionaires. What started as a means to get back at her selfish husband ended up with her getting tangled amid three close friends, who were best of friends and business partners; Ares Blackville, Marcos De Santos and Harvey Smith. Will Isabel get carried away by their attention and choose one of them or give in to what she felt for three of them?
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The concealer isn't covering it as I stare at my reflection in the bathroom mirror, dabbing more product onto the bruise on my upper arm where Leo grabbed me last week. Five days, and the purple-blue mark is still visible beneath my olive skin, a fingerprint constellation of his anger. "You made me do this," he'd said afterwards, his voice flat and cold. "If you weren't so fucking needy all the time..." I'd apologised. Actually apologized for making him hurt me again. My hands shake as I set down the concealer stick. Three years of marriage, and I've become an expert at hiding marks . The woman in the mirror is a stranger, chestnut brown eyes that used to sparkle with ambition now dull with carefully suppressed pain. Cheekbones are more prominent than they should be because Leo comments when I eat "too much." Hair perfectly styled because anything less results in a lecture about "letting myself go." When did I become this person? This hollow version of Isabel Queens who tiptoes through her own home, monitors her husband's moods like a weather system, and flinches at sudden movements? I know the answer. It was gradual… so gradual I didn't notice until I was drowning. First year: "You're too close to your family. They don't respect me. Choose." Second year: "You're too emotional. Too dramatic. Why do you always have to make everything a problem?" Third year: "You're lucky I stayed. No one else would put up with you." And now? Now I'm covering bruises and planning a perfect anniversary dinner like it'll somehow fix everything that's broken between us. Pathetic. I finished my makeup, another bruise on my collarbone from two nights ago when I "provoked him" by asking where he'd been until 2 AM. I'd learned quickly not to ask questions, but sometimes the words slip out anyway. Sometimes I still have flashes of the woman I used to be, the heiress who walked away from a billion-dollar empire because I thought I'd found something more valuable. Love. What a fucking joke. I return to the bedroom and stare at the red dress hanging on the closet door. I bought it specifically for tonight, it was expensive, elegant, and the kind of thing that might make Leo look at me the way he used to. Before the criticism, before the other women's perfume on his clothes, and before his hands became weapons. As I slip into the dress, I catalog the evidence I've been ignoring: The lipstick on his collar three months ago. "It's from a client, for fuck's sake. Stop being paranoid." The hotel receipt I found in his pocket. "A business meeting. Why are you going through my things? That's toxic behavior, Isabel." The late nights that became later. The phone calls he takes in another room. The way he recoils when I try to touch him, like I'm contaminated. "You're imagining things," he says whenever I gather the courage to confront him, and then come the consequences, the cold shoulder for days, the cutting remarks, and sometimes his hand on my arm just a little too tight. So I stopped asking, stopped noticing, and became the perfect, boring wife who waits at home and doesn't cause problems. My phone buzzes, a calendar reminder. Anniversary dinner, 7 PM, Lumière. I grab the gift I've hidden for weeks: a vintage watch I found at an estate sale, the kind Leo used to collect before he decided gifts from me were "unnecessary gestures." I wrapped it carefully, wrote a card about how much these three years have meant to me. All lies, but pretty ones. The penthouse feels gigantic as I walk through it. Leo insisted on this place when we married, even though it was beyond our means. "We need to look successful," he'd said. Now he is successful, and I'm just the wife who makes his home look good for the quarterly dinner parties he hosts without my input. I take an Uber to the restaurant, having learned that driving myself gives Leo aids Leo's arguments against me.. "Always so independent. Can't you just let me take care of things?" Lumière is romantic, soft lighting, city views, exactly what I wanted for tonight. The maître d' knows me; we've been here before, back when Leo still pretended to care about our relationship. "Mrs Hunters, wonderful to see you. Your table is ready." I smile, that practised smile that hides everything, and follow him to our table overlooking the glittering city. I sit, I wait and I check my phone obsessively. 7:15. He's probably just caught in traffic. 7:30. Maybe an important meeting ran late. 7:45. I order wine to calm my nerves, ignoring the pitying glance from our waiter. By 8:00, other diners are noticing. The woman is alone on what's clearly a special occasion, and I can feel their sympathy like a weight. My phone finally buzzes at 8:30. "Running late. Order without me." Not "Sorry." Not "Happy anniversary." Just five words that confirm what I already knew: I don't matter to him. I pay for my wine, three glasses that haven't dulled the pain, and leave. In the Uber, I pull up the tracking app I installed on Leo's phone months ago. He doesn't know about it. I'm not proud of it, but after the third time I found evidence and he convinced me I was "crazy" and "paranoid," I needed proof. I needed to know I wasn't losing my mind. The pin drops at The Grandview Hotel. Our hotel. Where he proposed four years ago, back when I still believed in fairytales. My stomach drops. No... No, he wouldn't. Not tonight. Not on our anniversary, but even as I redirect the driver, I know I'm lying to myself. Of course he would. Why would tonight be different from any other night? The driver dropped me in front of the hotel, and I walked through the lobby in my red dress like I was floating outside my body. Muscle memory carries me to the elevator, to the penthouse floor. Suite 2705. I know because I found the key card in his jacket last month, made a copy, and told myself I'd never use it. Another lie. My hands shake as I swipe the card. The door opens silently, and there it is, the soundtrack of my worst nightmare and deepest fear confirmed. A woman's breathy laugh, Leo's low voice, intimate in a way he hasn't been with me since... When? Our honeymoon? Before? I should leave. Preserve whatever dignity I have left. Go back to the restaurant, pretend I never saw this, and add it to the list of things I pretend not to know. That's what the broken version of Isabel would do. Instead, I walk deeper into the suite. Rose petals on the floor, romantic gestures he hasn't made for me in years. Champagne on ice, candles flickering, and through the partially open bedroom door: my husband, buried inside a blonde woman I've never seen before. I must have made a sound, shock, pain, or something because Leo's head turned, and our eyes met, and the bastard didn't even stop. He holds my gaze while he thrusts into her, a challenge in those cold blue eyes. Establishing dominance, and showing me exactly how little I matter. The blonde notices me and shrieks, scrambling for sheets, but Leo just keeps going, finishing with his eyes locked on mine, making sure I see every second. Only then does he pull away, standing to grab a robe like I've interrupted a business meeting instead of catching him balls-deep in someone else. "Isabel." His voice is calm and bored: "You're here." Three words that shatter what's left of my carefully constructed denial. Not "I'm sorry." Not "I can explain." Just the same tone he uses when I've interrupted his golf game. Something inside me that's been cracking for months, held together with denial and fear finally explodes. "We need to talk," he says, tying the robe casually. "Talk?" The laugh that bursts out of me is ugly, jagged with three years of suppressed rage. "You want to fucking talk?" "Don't be dramatic." He actually rolls his eyes, and I want to claw them out. "I was going to bring this up at dinner anyway." "Dinner?" My voice is rising, shaking. "You mean our anniversary dinner where I waited for you for over two fucking hours like an idiot?" "I texted you I was running late." "Running late?" I gesture wildly at the bed, at the champagne, at this whole carefully planned seduction scene. "This is running late? You planned this! You planned to fuck her on our anniversary in the hotel where you proposed to me!" The blonde finally escapes past me, and I don't even look at her. She doesn't matter. None of them matters; all the women whose perfume I've smelled, whose lipstick I've found, whose existence I've pretended not to notice because I was too terrified to face the truth, because facing the truth meant admitting I gave up everything for nothing. "This is exactly why we need to talk." Leo sits on the edge of the bed, surrounded by those goddamn rose petals, completely unbothered. "You've become hysterical, boring, and you're not the woman I married. I think it's time we make this marriage an open one so you can learn a trick or too from the men you sleep with and become fun once again." Each word is a knife, expertly placed after three years of learning exactly where to cut. "I gave up everything for you." My whole body is shaking now, rage and pain and three years of swallowed hurt erupting. "My family, my inheritance, and Queens Enterprises. I walked away from a billion-dollar legacy, destroyed my relationship with my father, gave up my position as heir to one of the most powerful companies in the country all because you asked me to choose!" "And I'm grateful—" "Grateful?" The laugh is back, bitter and broken. "You're grateful? Is that what you call it when you gaslight me for three years? When you make me think I'm crazy for noticing the evidence? When you put your hands on me and then convince me it's my fault?" His expression darkens, dangerous. "Watch your tone." There it is, the flash of anger that precedes violence. I've learned to recognise it, to defuse it, to make myself smaller so he doesn't explode. But tonight, something is different. Maybe it's catching him mid-thrust. Maybe it's the rose petals that were supposed to be for me. Maybe it's three years of breaking, finally reaching the point where there's nothing left to break. "Or what?" I step closer, and I see surprise flicker across his face. "You'll hurt me? Like you did last week? Or the week before? Or all the other times you've grabbed me, pushed me, made me cover bruises and pretend everything is fine?" "You're being dramatic—" "I'M BEING HONEST!" I'm screaming now, months of silence erupting. "For the first time in three years, I'm telling the truth! You're a cheating, abusive piece of shit, and I've been too terrified and broken to admit it!" He stands, and I force myself not to flinch, not to cower, and not to apologize. "You're nothing without me," he says coldly. "Your family won't take you back. You burned those bridges. Where are you going to go, Isabel? What are you going to do? You gave up your entire life for me. You're stuck with me forever." The words are designed to paralyze me with fear, and a month ago, a week ago, this morning they would have worked, but right now, watching him stand there so smug and certain while rose petals stick to his feet, I feel something other than fear. I feel rage, pure, crystalline, liberating rage. "I want a divorce," I say clearly. "And I'm going to make you regret every second of the last three years." For the first time, uncertainty flashes across his face. "Isabel—" "No." I cut him off. "No more talking, no more excuses, no more making me feel crazy for knowing the truth. We're done, and by the time I'm finished, you're going to wish you'd just been honest instead of spending three years breaking me down piece by piece." I turn and walk away, and this time when he calls after me, I don't stop.ISABELWednesday dinner is at Marco's penthouse.He cooks again, some elaborate Italian dish that requires three pans and precise timing. I sit at the kitchen counter watching him move through the space with his usual controlled efficiency, but something's off tonight.The precision feels tighter than normal. More rigid. He's quiet in a way that's different from his usual thoughtful silence.This is the silence of someone containing something.We ate at the dining table, the food excellent as always, but Marco's jaw is set throughout. His responses to my attempts at conversation clipped and minimal, like he's holding himself together with concentrated effort.Halfway through the meal I set down my fork."What's wrong?""Nothing." His reply is mmediate and automatic."Marco."He continues eating."Marco. Talk to me."He sets his fork down with careful, controlled precision, and look at me across the table with grey eyes that are doing their best to be unreadable and failing."I'm fine.
ARESSaturday morning starts wrong.I wake early, earlier than usual and lie in bed staring at the ceiling for twenty minutes before giving up on sleep entirely.Harvey is traveling. Boston, some risk assessment meeting that couldn't be rescheduled which means last night, Isabel stayed with Marco.I knew this, and I agreed to this. It was on the shared calendar we all maintain with careful, deliberate honesty.Intellectually, I understand completely. Emotionally, I didn't sleep well. I tell myself I'm fine.I make coffee, and review some work emails. Go for a run along the river, trying to outpace the thing sitting heavy in my chest bu it doesn't work.On the way back, my route takes me past Marco's building. I don't plan it, I don't consciously decide anything but my feet slow when I see the familiar figure emerging from the building entrance.Isabel.Hair slightly messed from sleep. Marco's oversized grey sweater hanging off one shoulder. She is carrying her heels in one hand, and h
ISABELMonday morning arrives with the particular cruelty of all Monday mornings.I walk into Queens Enterprises at eight AM looking every inch the acting CEO, navy suit, heels, hair pinned back, and professional armor fully assembled.Nobody looking at me would guess I spent Sunday evening tangled on a penthouse floor with three men, eating sushi and falling asleep to the sound of Ares's quiet breathing. That's the skill I've developed over the past weeks. Compartmentalization, that is personal Isabel and professional Isabel in completely separate boxes and it works mostly.The quarterly board presentation is at ten AM. I've prepared for weeks, financial projections, operational improvements, strategic initiatives, and growth metrics. Everything is polished to perfection.The boardroom fills with faces I've known my entire life. Men who watched me grow up, who doubted my return, and who are only now beginning to accept that I belong here.My father sits at the head of the table, his
ISABELWeekends belong to all of us.No schedules, no carefully designated time, just four people learning how to exist together as something that defies every conventional label.The first weekend starts Saturday morning when all three men show up at my apartment unannounced, Ares with groceries, Marco with expensive coffee, Harvey with nothing except his presence which somehow feels like the most significant contribution."We're making breakfast," Ares announces, already heading to my kitchen."You're making breakfast," Marco corrects, following. "I'm supervising.""You're both in my kitchen uninvited," I point out.Harvey stops beside me, his hand finding the back of my neck briefly. "Do you want us to leave?""No," I admit.His mouth curves slightly. "Then stop complaining."Breakfast becomes an event.Ares cooks with enthusiastic chaos—eggs everywhere, bacon spitting on the stove, flour somehow appearing despite no baking occurring.Marco stands at the coffee maker with surgical












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