MY HUSBAND OWNS HALF THE CITY
MY HUSBAND OWNS HALF THE CITY
Author: Daniel Quill
Ashes and Vengeance
Author: Daniel Quill
last update2026-01-05 16:29:38

The evening wind carried the scent of charred wood—a smell that never quite left this place, even after ten years.

Kai Walker stood motionless among the skeletal remains of what had once been the Walker family estate. Blackened beams jutted from the earth like broken ribs. Weeds had claimed the foundation, nature slowly erasing the evidence of that terrible night. But Kai remembered. Every detail was seared into his mind with the same permanence as the scorch marks on the stone pillars.

He crouched, fingers brushing against a fragment of porcelain half-buried in the dirt. His mother's favorite teacup. The delicate blue pattern was still visible beneath a decade of grime.

Mother. Father. Mei.

The fire had taken everything. His parents, his younger sister—all vanished without a trace. The official report claimed their bodies were consumed by the flames, but Kai had never believed it. There were too many inconsistencies, too many unanswered questions. Someone had orchestrated that fire, and someone would pay.

He had been fifteen then, away at his first intensive training session. When he returned to find his home reduced to ashes, something inside him had crystallized into cold purpose. Master Donovan had found him there, kneeling in the ruins, and offered him a path forward. Ten years under the undefeated War God of the Federation, Mr. Donovan—as the world knew him—had transformed the grief-stricken boy into something else entirely.

Now, at twenty-five, Kai had finally descended from the mountains. His training was complete. His identity, carefully hidden. His mission, crystal clear.

The teacup fragment slipped from his fingers.

A woman's scream shattered the silence.

Kai's head snapped up. The sound came from beyond the collapsed eastern wall, where the old garden had been. His body moved before his mind fully processed the situation, years of training taking over. He vaulted over debris with practiced ease, landing silently on the overgrown path.

Three men surrounded a young woman near the remains of the garden pavilion. Even in the dim twilight, Kai could see she was fighting, clawing, kicking, every movement desperate. But her coordination was off, her movements sluggish despite the fury behind them.

"Hold her still!" one of the men snarled, his meaty hand connecting with her face in a vicious slap that snapped her head to the side.

The woman stumbled but didn't fall. Blood trickled from her split lip as she glared at her attackers with pure defiance. "You're dead, all of you. When my family finds out—"

"Your family?" The ringleader, a scarred man with a gold tooth, laughed cruelly. "Sweetheart, by the time we're done with you, there won't be enough left for your family to identify. Now stop making this difficult."

He grabbed her arm, and she twisted, landing a surprisingly solid elbow to his ribs. The man grunted, then backhanded her so hard she crashed into the pavilion's remaining pillar.

"Feisty bitch," he spat. "That drug should've had you begging by now. Guess we'll just have to work a little harder."

Kai's jaw tightened. He had come here for solitude, to pay respects before beginning his hunt. He didn't need complications. But watching these men—

The ringleader's hands were on the woman's blouse now, tearing.

"Enough."

Kai's voice cut through the twilight, quiet but absolute.

The three men froze, then turned cautiously. Their hands moved to weapons—a knife, a metal pipe, brass knuckles. They were expecting trouble.

Then they saw him.

A beat of silence. Then the scarred leader threw back his head and laughed, the other two quickly joining in.

"Out here this late? Does your mommy know where you are?" The ringleader's gold tooth glinted as he grinned. "Go home, kid. This doesn't concern you."

Kai remained motionless, his expression flat. He looked young—he understood that. Slim, college-aged at best, dressed simply in dark clothes. People always underestimated him. He had learned to use it.

"You little brat," one of the others jeered, brandishing his pipe. "Barely old enough to shave, trying to play hero? Beat it before your mom calls the cops."

"Let her go," Kai said, his tone unchanged. "Or die. Your choice."

The laughter died instantly.

"What did you just say?" The ringleader's face darkened with rage.

Kai's eyes were cold as winter steel. "I don't repeat myself."

"You're asking for it!" The man with the pipe charged first, swinging wildly.

Kai sidestepped with minimal movement, caught the pipe mid-swing, and used the man's momentum to flip him over his shoulder. The thug hit the ground hard, the impact driving the air from his lungs.

The one with brass knuckles came next, more cautious but no more effective. Kai deflected the punch, struck his ribs, then throat, and the man crumpled, gasping.

The ringleader pulled his knife, circling warily. "Who the hell are you?"

Kai didn't answer. He moved like water and shadow. The knife slashed through empty air once, twice. On the third attempt, Kai caught the man's wrist, twisted sharply, and drove his palm into the scarred face, his bone crunched and the knife clattered away.

Thirty seconds. That's all it had taken.

The three men lay groaning on the ground. The ringleader, blood streaming from his shattered nose, scrambled to his knees. His earlier arrogance had evaporated.

"Wait, wait!" He held up trembling hands. "I was hired, okay? I didn't want to do this! Someone paid me to grab the girl. I swear, I swear if you let me go, I'll disappear. You'll never see me again. I'll turn my life around, I promise!"

Kai looked down at him with contempt. "You're right. I'll never see you again."

His fist connected with the man's temple. The ringleader collapsed, unconscious before he hit the ground.

Silence returned to the ruins.

Kai turned to the woman. She had slid down the pillar, sitting now with her back against the stone, watching him with glazed eyes. Her pupils were dilated, her skin flushed an unnatural pink. Sweat beaded on her forehead despite the cool evening air.

He approached carefully, kneeling beside her. "Are you hurt?"

"I'm... fine..." But her words slurred, and her body trembled.

Kai reached for her wrist. She jerked a little but didn’t pull back. He felt her pulse—it was fast, uneven, and wild.

His expression hardened. He'd seen this before, during his training in less savory parts of the world. The symptoms were unmistakable. The drug in her system wasn't just an aphrodisiac, it was toxic, designed to burn through the body's defenses, raising core temperature until...

Two hours, maybe less, given her elevated heart rate.

He studied her face—delicate features, expensive clothes despite their current state, a jade pendant at her throat worth more than most people earned in a year. Whoever she was, she came from money. And whoever wanted her dead had gone to elaborate lengths to make it look like something else.

He closed his eyes briefly.

"Damn it."

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  • Chapter 48

    The pillow barrier came down on a Tuesday.Neither of them announced it. Kai moved the pillows back to the headboard stack before Lila came out of the bathroom and when she emerged and saw the bed she looked at it for a moment and then got in on her side without comment. He turned off the lamp on his side. She turned off hers.The dark was the same dark as before. The distance was different.He was aware of her in the specific way you are aware of someone when the physical boundary that had been organizing that awareness is removed. The sound of her breathing. The particular way the mattress registered her weight and position. He lay on his back and looked at the ceiling and thought about the legal deadline and the evidence package Patricia was compiling and whether any of it would be sufficient and then made himself stop thinking about it because that was not a useful way to spend the night.He fell asleep eventually.He woke at two-seventeen by the clock on the nightstand, sitting u

  • Chapter 47

    The conference room was on the third floor of a building that housed family court mediation services, which meant the walls were painted the particular shade of institutional beige that communicated neutrality and produced the opposite effect. Kai sat at the table with their lawyer, Patricia Chen, and looked at the beige walls and thought about how Richard had managed to make this happen in a week.The answer was that Richard had probably been preparing it for longer than a week and had filed when the moment suited him. The gala coverage had forced his hand. A positive morning in the papers was a shrinking window and Richard understood windows.The opposing lawyer was a man named Forsythe who had the specific manner of someone who had been paid to be unpleasant and had made peace with that. He arranged his documents on the table with the deliberateness of someone who wanted you to see how many there were.The judge overseeing the preliminary hearing was a woman named Caldwell, mid-six

  • Chapter 46

    The morning papers arrived at seven and Vincent sent the digital links twenty minutes before that. Kai read them at the desk in Marcus's study, which had been cleaned and lit properly now that the generators were running permanently, and which he had been spending more time in than the master bedroom.The coverage was better than he had expected and he understood why immediately. The venue story had leaked before the gala, which meant the journalists who attended had arrived expecting a visible failure and found something else instead. Failure redeemed made a better story than success maintained. He understood this. He had given them the narrative they needed and they had used it.The Thorne Heir's Dramatic Return, one headline read. Another called the ruins venue audacious. A third ran a photograph of the entrance arch with the string lights visible through it and a caption about legacy reclaimed. Gerald Vance was quoted in one piece saying he found the evening impressive. Mrs. Black

  • Chapter 45

    The first cars arrived at seven-thirty.Kai watched them from the entrance arch, the headlights moving up the drive through the cleared grounds, and thought about the last time vehicles had come up this road. Ten years ago they would have been fire trucks. He let the thought arrive and pass and straightened his jacket.The transformation held. That was the thing he hadn't been certain of until this moment, standing in it with other people present. In the daylight it had looked like ambition applied to wreckage. In the evening, with the string lights running through the open roof frames and along the standing walls and across the garden where the crews had cleared a decade of growth, it looked like something else. The blackened stone caught the light differently than new stone would have. The empty window frames became architecture. The collapsed east wing, carefully bordered and left as it was, looked intentional, a monument rather than a ruin.He heard a woman near the entrance say i

  • Chapter 44

    The decision came at eleven-thirty at night, which was probably relevant to how it got made.Kai was sitting in Eleanor's study with a list of venues Vincent had compiled, each one annotated with capacity, availability, and the specific way it fell short of the Aldridge. A hotel ballroom that could manage the numbers but carried the aesthetic of a corporate conference. A private club that was technically available but whose membership list overlapped significantly with the people most likely to interpret the change as retreat. A rooftop space that was too small and too casual and would reframe the entire event in a way that served Richard's narrative rather than dismantling it.He set the list down and thought about the property Eleanor had returned to him.Lila was at the other end of the desk when he said it. She looked up from the catering contract she had been trying to salvage."The Thorne estate," he said.She looked at him for a moment. "Kai.""It's my property. It's large enou

  • Chapter 43

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