Marco Christian stood at the floor-to-ceiling windows of his corner office, the Seattle skyline shimmering through a curtain of afternoon rain. At forty-two, he commanded respect and fear in equal measure. His steel-gray eyes, the color of a winter sky, had witnessed countless business deals where he’d crushed competitors without so much as a flinch. Marco Christian didn’t just win; he obliterated.

“Sir, your wife called about dinner tonight,” his secretary’s voice announced through the intercom, crisp and impersonal.
Marco’s jaw tightened, an almost imperceptible clenching of muscle. Jenny. His wife of sixteen years and the mother of their fourteen-year-old daughter, Casey. The woman who had once looked at him with an adoration that felt like sunshine now scheduled dinners with him like a business appointment.
He’d built Christian Industries from the rubble of his childhood after his father abandoned them when he was twelve. While other kids played video games, Marco studied, worked, and planned. By twenty-five, he owned three successful tech startups. By thirty-five, he’d married Jenny Neil, a stunning brunette from a middle-class family who seemed suitably impressed by his meteoric rise.
The early years had been good. Jenny had been a supportive partner, a warm presence against the cold backdrop of his ambition. They’d had Casey, bought the sprawling mansion in Bellevue, and meticulously assembled the facade of the American dream. But success bred complacency, and in the fertile soil of complacency, betrayal had taken root.
His phone buzzed. A text from his business partner, Wesley Stratton. Emergency meeting tomorrow. Need to discuss the Henderson contract.
Wesley. Six feet tall, with a charming smile that could disarm a hostile board meeting. Marco had met him five years ago, his consulting firm circling the drain. Seeing a spark of potential, Marco had bailed him out, making him a partner and giving him a forty percent stake in the expanded business. He’d given the man a kingdom.
That evening, Marco arrived home to find Jenny in the kitchen, a black dress hugging her curves perfectly. Too perfectly for a quiet dinner at home.
“You look beautiful,” he said, kissing her cheek. The skin was cool, and she tensed almost imperceptibly at his touch.
“Thank you. How was your day?” Her voice was a melody of forced cheerfulness that grated on his nerves.
“Productive,” he replied, watching her closely. “Wesley mentioned an issue with the Henderson contract. Are you familiar with that client?”
Something flickered in her eyes—a brief, unguarded flash of panic before it was expertly concealed. “No, should I be?”
“Just curious. You seem to know more about my business lately than you used to.”
Casey bounded into the kitchen then, her blonde hair, so like her mother’s, bouncing with youthful energy. “Dad! Can I sleep over at Melissa Connor’s house this weekend?”
Melissa Connor. The name was filed away in the vast, cross-referenced database of Marco’s mind. Her dad’s a police officer. New at school.
“We’ll see,” he said, ruffling her hair, the gesture a well-practiced pantomime of fatherly affection.
During dinner, Marco watched Jenny like a hawk. She checked her phone three times, each glance a furtive, guilty act. When she excused herself to use the bathroom, she took her purse—and her phone—with her.
After Casey went to bed, Marco sat in his study, a glass of twenty-year-old Macallan in his hand. He had built an empire on the unshakeable principle that information was power. He knew the weaknesses of every rival, the secrets of every competitor. And yet, he had been blind in his own home.
The next morning, Marco called his younger brother, Gerald, a private investigator in Portland. They hadn’t spoken in months, not since Gerald had criticized Marco’s obsession with work.
“I need you to look into something,” Marco said, his voice flat and devoid of preamble.
“Always straight to business,” Gerald sighed. “What is it?”
“My wife,” Marco said. “And Wesley Stratton. Be discreet.”
There was a heavy pause on the other end of the line. “Marco, are you sure you want to go down this road?”
“Just do it.”
Three days later, Gerald sat across from his brother in the study, a manila folder lying between them like a loaded weapon.
“You’re not going to like this,” Gerald said, his voice heavy.
Marco’s expression remained impassive as he opened the folder. Photos spilled out. Jenny and Wesley at a hotel bar, kissing in Wesley’s car, entering an apartment Marco didn’t recognize. The timestamps chronicled an eight-month affair.
“There’s more,” Gerald said quietly. “They’re planning something. Wesley’s been meeting with a guy named Tommy Travis—he creates new identities, false documents.”
Marco’s fingers drummed a silent, furious rhythm against the polished surface of his desk. “Go on.”
“I think they’re planning to disappear. Together. Wesley’s been slowly liquidating assets, converting them to cryptocurrency. And Jenny…” Gerald hesitated. “She’s been photographing documents from your home office. Insurance policies, offshore accounts, business contracts. Everything worth stealing.”
Marco stood and walked to his safe. He’d noticed the files had been moved—a subtle shift, a millimeter off-center that only his obsessive eye would catch.
“My wife thinks she can betray me and walk away rich,” Marco’s laugh was a cold, empty sound. “With my business partner, no less.”
“Marco, what are you thinking? You can divorce her. Cut Wesley out of the business.”
“No,” Marco’s voice cut through the air like a blade. “They’ve declared war. And in war, the only acceptable outcome is total victory.”
Over the next week, Marco became a ghost in his own life, maintaining his routine while his true focus was on intelligence gathering. He installed hidden cameras throughout the house. He hired a tech expert to mirror Jenny’s phone and computer. He had Wesley followed around the clock.
The picture that emerged was more audacious and depraved than he had imagined. They weren’t just planning to rob him. They were planning to erase him from Jenny’s life story by faking her death. A fiery car accident. A massive insurance payout. And while Marco was consumed by a carefully orchestrated grief, Wesley would systematically drain the business assets. By the time anyone realized the truth, the two of them, along with Marco’s duplicitous accountant, Ivan Graham, would be living in luxury in a non-extradition country.
They had made a fatal error. They saw a successful man who’d grown soft with wealth. They didn’t see the twelve-year-old boy who stood over his mother’s tear-stained face and swore that no one would ever abandon or betray him again.
Marco’s plan began to form, a complex architecture of retribution. His first move was to contact Melissa Connor—not Casey’s friend, but a former military police officer turned private security consultant. She was small, blonde, and deceptively innocent-looking.
“I need someone who can play dead convincingly,” he told her over coffee.
Melissa raised an eyebrow. “That’s an unusual request, Mr. Christian.”
“I’m willing to pay you fifty thousand dollars for one day’s work.”
“I’m listening.”
He explained a carefully edited version of the situation. A wife planning to fake her death. A husband wanting to turn the tables.