She wants your money without your voice attached to it.
“Give me the packet,” you say.
Amara places it carefully in your palm like it might burn her.
You stare at it. Such a small thing. So plain. So ordinary. A tiny white packet that could have ended your life slowly enough for Ruth to pretend she was grieving.
Your stomach twists.
“Did she say what it was?” you ask.
Amara shakes her head. “No. But she said it would make you weaker.”
You close your fist around it.
For months, Ruth has mocked you in your own home. She has flirted with men in front of you. She has invited her friends over and called you “half a husband” after her third glass of champagne. She has hidden your phone, ignored your medication schedule, and once left you by the pool for hours in the summer heat because she “forgot.”
You told yourself she was cruel.
You did not know she was dangerous.
“Amara,” you say, “listen carefully. We are not going to confront her tonight.”
Her eyes widen. “But sir—”
“If we confront her without proof, she will deny everything. Then she will destroy you first.” You look down at the packet again. “And after that, she will finish what she started.”
Amara wipes her cheek, still trembling.
“What do we do?”
You turn your chair slightly toward the hallway. Your reflection appears in the dark window—thin, pale, seated, but not defeated. Ruth has mistaken your wheelchair for weakness. Everyone has. Even you, for a while.
But your mind still works.
Your empire was not built with legs.
“Tonight,” you say, “we let her think she won.”
Dinner is served at eight o’clock.
Ruth comes downstairs in a silver dress that shines like moonlight and lies like sin. She has changed her lipstick. She has put on diamond earrings. She looks less like a wife and more like a woman attending the funeral she arranged early.
You sit at the long dining table with the untouched soup in front of you.
Amara stands near the wall, face lowered.
Ruth watches you with bright, hungry eyes.
“Why aren’t you eating, darling?” she asks sweetly.