Raha stood paralyzed, staring at her reflection in the darkened window.

She watched Jabber’s hands come around her neck.

The metal was freezing.

He clasped the latch.

Clicked.

A sharp mechanical sound.

Beautiful, he whispered.

He wasn’t looking at her face.

He was looking at the diamonds.

He was admiring his property.

My friends are here, Jabber said, checking his watch.

Smile, Raha.

You are the lady of the house now.

The celebration was a small intimate affair in the main living room.

The storm was still raging outside, battering the glass walls, but inside the atmosphere was one of insulated privilege.

Three men sat on the leather sofas.

They were Jabber’s inner circle business partners, fellow investors in the Elmer John Dream.

There was Tar, a real estate developer with a smile like a shark.

Omar, a silent man who owned a fleet of shipping tankers, and Wall-E, the youngest, who laughed too loud and stared at Raha with open predatory curiosity.

They were drinking blue label whiskey.

The air was thick with the smell of cigar smoke and testosterone.

To the acquisition, Wally toasted, raising his glass as Jabber entered with Raha on his arm.

To the merger, Tar corrected, winking.

Jabber beamed.

He was high not just on life but chemically.

Raha noticed the dilated pupils, the rapid jaw movement, the sheen of sweat on his forehead.

He had been visiting the bathroom frequently.

Gentlemen, Jabber announced, presenting Raha like a prize heer at an auction.

My wife, the men clapped.

It was a slow, lazy applause.

They looked her up and down, assessing the merchandise.

They knew who she was.

They knew she was the bartender from the vault.

They knew she was the help, but now she was wearing Jabber’s diamonds, so they treated her with a mock difference that was more insulting than cruelty.

Charmed, Omar grunted, Raha sat on the edge of the sofa next to Jabber.

He draped his arm around her shoulders, his fingers digging into her flesh.

He pulled her close, marking his territory.

“She is shy,” Jabber said, pouring himself another drink.

His hand was shaking slightly.

The energy was buzzing off him.

It has been an emotional day.

The storm.

You know, the storm is brutal.

Wally laughed, chopping a line of white powder on the glass coffee table.

I saw a car overturned on the coastal road.

Some old Toyota buried in the drift.

Poor bastard probably didn’t make it.

Raha stopped breathing.

Car overturned.

Buried.

Jabber felt her stiffen.

He squeezed her shoulder hard.

A warning.

Careful on the roads, Jabber said smoothly, reaching for the rolledup bill Wallally offered him.

The desert takes what it wants.

He leaned forward and snorted the line.

He threw his head back, inhaling sharply.

The captagon hit him instantly.

His eyes widened.

He looked invincible.

Raha felt a nausea rising in her throat that had nothing to do with the alcohol she hadn’t touched.

She was sitting next to the man who had ordered the hit, listening to his friends joke about the wreckage.

They were monsters.

No, they were worse.

They were businessmen.

To them, Matteo wasn’t a human being.

He was debris.

I need Raha stood up.

Her legs were trembling.

I need to use the restroom.

Jabber looked at her.

The drugs made his gaze intense.

Manic.

Hurry back, he said, his hand lingering on her wrist before letting go.

We haven’t cut the cake.

The men laughed.

Raha walked out of the living room.

She kept her back straight.

She walked what the glide jabber had taught her, but inside she was screaming.

She entered the guest bathroom on the ground floor.

She locked the door.

She collapsed against the sink, gripping the cold porcelain until her knuckles turned white.

She looked in the mirror.

The woman staring back wasn’t Raha.

The woman in the mirror was a stranger in a white dress and a diamond collar.

Her eyes were hollow, dead, he is buried.

The voice in her head whispered, “Mateo is buried.

You are buried.

She looked at the door.

She couldn’t run.

The guards were outside.

The storm was outside.

She looked at the medicine cabinet.

Jabber used this bathroom when he was entertaining.

It was his private stash.

She opened the mirror door.

It was a pharmacy of vice.

There were bottles of prescription painkillers, sleeping pills for the nights the conscience or the caffeine wouldn’t let him rest.

And there on the bottom shelf was a small plastic bag filled with small yellowish pills.

Captagon.

The poor man’s cocaine.

The soldier’s courage.

The drug that kept fighters awake for days in war zones.

It was a powerful amphetamine.

It made your heart race.

It made you feel like a god.

Next to it was a bottle of heavyduty seditive benzoazipines.

The label read, “Take one for sleep.

Do not operate heavy machinery.

” Raha stared at the bottles.

She wasn’t a chemist, but she was a bartender.

She knew about mixing.

She knew about the speedball.

She knew what happened when you mixed a massive dose of uppers with a massive dose of downers.

The heart doesn’t know whether to sprint or stop.

The signals get crossed.

The electrical system shorts out, causes cardiac arrest, and in a man Jabber’s age who had been drinking whiskey and snorting lines all night, it would look like a tragic hedonistic accident.

Raha reached out.

Her hand didn’t shake.

The fear was gone.

The grief was gone.

In their place was a cold, hard clarity.

Jabber had taught her that everything was a transaction.

He had bought her life.

He had bought her family.

He had tried to buy her soul.

But contracts can be terminated.

If the principal account holder is deceased, she thought the legal jargon flowing through her mind like a prayer.

The assets are frozen.

The debt collection stops.

The leverage disappears.

She grabbed the bag of Captagon.

She grabbed the bottle of sedatives.

She opened the bag.

She took a heavy crystal glass from the shelf.

She placed 10 of the Captagon pills in the bottom.

She used the handle of a toothbrush to crush them into a fine yellow dust.

Then she opened the seditive bottle.

She took five capsules, pulled them apart, and dumped the white powder into the mix.

Yellow and white, energy and sleep, life and death.

She turned on the tap and added a splash of warm water, swirling it until the powder dissolved into a cloudy, bitter paste.

She looked at her reflection one last time.

“You don’t have a husband,” she whispered to the mirror, repeating Jabber’s words back to herself.

“You have a target.

” She wiped a smudge of mascara from under her eye.

She pinched her cheeks to bring back the color.

She unlocked the door.

She walked back out into the hallway, moving toward the bar.

The sound of the men’s laughter drifted down the corridor.

They were celebrating their power.

They were celebrating their ownership of the world.

Raha walked to the wet bar in the living room.

Al cove.

Jabber’s crystal tumbler was sitting there empty, waiting for a refill.

Raha.

Jabber called out from the sofa.

He was sweating profusely now.

His tie loosened.

Where is my whiskey? A groom should not have an empty glass.

Coming habibi, Raha said.

Her voice was sweet, smooth.

She picked up the bottle of blue label.

She poured a generous measure into the tumbler.

Then, shielding the glass with her body, she poured the slurry from the bathroom cup into the whiskey.

She swirled it.

The expensive amber liquid clouded for a second, then cleared.

She walked toward the sofa.

The storm outside hammered against the glass.

A drum roll for the final act.

Raha held the glass out.

The diamonds on her wrist caught the light, flashing like warning beacons.

Jabber looked up at her.

He smiled.

He saw a broken woman.

He saw a subdued wife.

He saw an asset that had finally been brought to heal.

He reached out.

His fingers brushed hers.

“To us,” Jabber said.

“To us,” Raha replied.

He brought the glass to his lips.

This was the wedding.

This was the consummation.

Not with a kiss, but with a sip.

Raha watched him drink.

She watched him swallow the poison she had mixed with the same hands he had put in cuffs.

And for the first time all night, amidst the storm and the smoke and the ruins of her life, Raha felt something she hadn’t felt in months.

She felt like the one in control.

3:14 a.

m.

The Almar John coast.

The storm had finally exhausted itself.

The wind, which had spent the last 6 hours tearing at the foundations of the Obsidian Complex, dropped to a low, mournful whistle.

Inside villa number four, the silence returned, creeping back into the corners of the room like rising water.

The guests were gone.

Tar, Omar, and Wall had stumbled out to their waiting limousines 20 minutes earlier, leaving behind a trail of cigar ash and empty promises.

They had clapped Jabber on the back, made crude jokes about the wedding night, and vanished into the night, oblivious to the fact that they were the last people who would ever see him alive.

Jabber was alone with his bride.

He sat in the cognac leather armchair facing the sea, the heavy crystal tumbler resting on his knee.

He was sweating, a cold, slick sheen that coated his forehead despite the aggressive air conditioning.

The captagon was firing in his synapses, demanding action, demanding noise.

But the alcohol and the fatigue were pulling him down, creating a jarring electrical dissonance in his body.

“Raha,” he croked.

His voice was thick, slurring slightly.

“Refill! Raha stood by the bar.

She hadn’t moved since the guests left.

She watched him with the detached curiosity of a scientist observing a lab rat navigating a maze that had no exit.

“You haven’t finished the last one,” she said softly.

Jabber looked down at the glass.

There was an inch of amber liquid left.

The slurry of crushed amphetamines and sedatives had settled slightly at the bottom, a murky sediment in the expensive whiskey.

He frowned, trying to focus his eyes.

The room was swimming.

The edges of the furniture seemed to be vibrating.

“Drink it,” he muttered to himself, lifting the glass.

“Celebration,” he tipped his head back and drained it.

He swallowed the sediment.

He swallowed the poison.

Raha watched his throat work.

She didn’t flinch.

She didn’t look away.

She counted the seconds.

1 2 3.

Jabber set the glass down on the side table with a heavy clunk.

He leaned his head back against the leather, closing his eyes.

He expected the rush.

He expected the second wind that the white pills usually gave him.

Instead, he felt a sledgehammer hit his chest.

It started as a flutter, a bird trapped in his rib cage.

Then it became a vice.

The chemical war Raha had unleashed in his bloodstream was catastrophic.

The captagon was screaming at his heart to beat faster, to pump harder, to run a marathon.

The bzzoazipines were screaming at his respiratory system to slow down, to relax, to stop.

The biological confusion was lethal.

His heart entered a chaotic, shuddering arrhythmia.

“Raha!” Jabber gasped.

His eyes flew open.

They were wide, terrified, and confused.

“My chest!” he tried to stand up.

His brain sent the command to his legs, but the signal got lost in the static.

His knees buckled.

He collapsed back into the chair.

his limbs feeling like they were filled with wet cement.

I need he wheezed, clutching at his dress shirt, popping a button.

Doctor, call security.

Raha walked out from behind the bar.

The silk dress rustled on the marble.

A soft whispering sound.

She didn’t walk to the phone.

She didn’t walk to the panic button on the wall.

She walked to the window.

No, she said.

Jabber stared at her.

The word didn’t make sense.

No one said no to Jabberl Cassammy.

What? He managed to choke out.

The blue tint was already starting to spread across his lips.

The oxygen wasn’t reaching his blood.

Raha turned to face him.

She stood framed by the darkness of the sea.

The diamond collar glittering in the low light like the teeth of a trap.

“You bought the debt,” Raha said.

Her voice was calm, devoid of anger, devoid of fear.

You put it all in the spreadsheet, column A, column B.

You balanced the books, Jabber.

She took a step closer, stopping just out of his reach.

But you forgot the transaction fee.

Jabber’s mouth opened and closed like a fish on a dock.

He was drowning in dry air.

His hands scrambled across the side table, knocking over the empty glass.

It rolled off and hit the floor, but didn’t break.

It just spun, a dizzying circle of sound.

He reached for his laptop.

if he could just open it.

If he could just summon help.

Raha reached out and gently closed the lid of the computer.

The account is closed,” she whispered.

Jabber’s vision was tunneling.

The room was going dark.

All he could see was the white dress and the diamonds, the assets he had purchased, the objects he had owned.

He tried to speak one last time.

He wanted to threaten her.

He wanted to tell her he would burn the farm, burn the village, burn the world.

But his vocal cords were paralyzed.

All that came out was a wet, rattling exhale.

His head lulled back against the chair.

His eyes fixed on the horizon line where the sun was threatening to rise.

The struggle stopped.

The heart gave up.

The ledger was balanced.

Raha stood there for a long time.

She watched the rise and fall of his chest slow down.

Shallow.

Slower.

Slower.

Stop.

Jabber Alcasmi, the titan of the Almerjan coast, was dead.

He looked peaceful, almost asleep, except for the terrifying blue color of his skin.

Raha didn’t cry.

She didn’t laugh.

She felt a profound hollow lightness.

The weight of the debt, the weight of the fear, the weight of the future.

It all evaporated in the climate controlled room.

She walked over to the table.

The spreadsheet was still there.

The hard copy Jabber had printed out to taunt her.

She picked it up.

She folded it carefully, creasing the edges with her thumb.

She placed it in the pocket of Jabber’s dressing gown, right over his silent heart.

A receipt for services rendered.

Then she sat down on the floor by the window.

She pulled her knees to her chest, wrapping her arms around her legs, just like she had done in the staff dormatory, just like she had done in the closet when she was hiding from him.

She waited.

She watched the sun come up.

It turned the gray sea into a sheet of hammered copper.

It illuminated the wreckage of the storm outside, the uprooted palms, the layers of sand.

At 5:12 a.m., she heard the electric hum of the security cart outside.

She didn’t move.

She heard the footsteps on the marble stairs.

She heard the door squeak open.

Mr.Alcasmi, it was Victor, the guard.

Raha didn’t turn around.

She knew what would happen next, the sirens, the handcuffs, the questions, the cell.

But it didn’t matter because in a hospital in the Philippines, a money transfer had already cleared.

The mortgage was paid.

The surgery was funded.

And somewhere under the drifting sand of a coastal road, a boy named Matteo had clawed his way to the surface, broken but breathing.

Raha held out her hands, the diamond cuffs catching the first light of the morning sun.

She was ready to pay the price.

The trial of Raha Cruz was the shortest in the history of the Elmar John High Court.

There was no denial, no plea bargain.

She confessed to the administration of a lethal substance with the same calm efficiency she had once used to mix drinks in the vault.

The prosecution called her a black widow.

The defense called her a victim of economic coercion.

The tabloids called her the diamond killer.

She was sentenced to life imprisonment in the Kurara women’s correctional facility.

But if you visit her today, you won’t see a woman suffering.

She works in the prison library.

She reads, “She sleeps eight hours a night.

She smiles, a real smile, not the service mask she wore for years, because she knows the truth that the court records omitted.

Matteo survived.

He was found by a passing truck driver 3 hours after the storm cleared.

He lost the use of his left leg, but he returned to Santa Cedro.

He works the farm now, the farm that Jabber Elcasm paid for.

Every month, Matteo sends a letter to the prison.

It contains no words, just a photograph.

Picture of a harvest.

Picture of a new roof.

A picture of a sunrise over a green field that belongs to no one but them.

Jabber thought he could buy people.

He thought the world was a marketplace where everything had a price tag.

He was right.

Everything does have a price, but he forgot to check the cost of the one thing he wanted most, control.

Raha sits in her cell, and she is the freest woman in the world.

She traded her life for theirs.

It was a hostile takeover, a liquidation of assets.

 

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