SON-IN-LAW BY DAY, UNDERGROUND KING BY NIGHT
SON-IN-LAW BY DAY, UNDERGROUND KING BY NIGHT
Author: M.U.D
1
Author: M.U.D
last update2025-10-05 03:30:44

“You signed them, right? The papers?”

The question was thin, sharp, and it hung painfully in the opulent air of the penthouse office. Aria Elston did not look at Mikael Dray. Her gaze was fixed on the sprawling city lights glittering twenty floors below, her perfectly manicured fingers clutching a thin, sealed, white envelope.

Mikael stepped further into the room, the lingering scent of expensive cigar smoke and old-money perfume clinging to the leather of the executive chairs. The massive glass table in the center was still littered with champagne flutes and the signed Aethel contract documents—the contract that had just secured the Elston Group’s next decade.

“Aria, what in the hell are you talking about?” Mikael asked, his voice low, a tired rumble from a man who hadn’t slept properly in three days. The relief and exhaustion of the night were still etched into his face, and he was still wearing the tuxedo from the celebratory dinner. “I just closed the biggest deal the company has ever seen. We should be popping another bottle of the good stuff. What papers are you talking about? Legal filings? Tax forms?”

Aria finally turned, but her eyes were glazed over, still meticulously avoiding his. She pushed the sealed envelope across the vast expanse of the glass table. It slid to a stop beside a half-forgotten bottle of vintage Bordeaux, the expensive red wine glinting under the track lighting.

“The annulment papers to end our marriage, Mikael,” she whispered, the words barely audible, like a confession she desperately wanted to take back. “My father and the board agreed to have them drawn up months ago. They’re already processed, legally sound. All that’s missing is your signature. Just sign them, and it will all be over, cleanly and quietly.”

Mikael’s chest felt like it had been suddenly and brutally caved in. The pure, heady elation from the evening’s victory drained out of him, leaving behind a hollow, cold space that radiated outward through his body. He stared at the pristine white envelope, then lifted his eyes to his wife of five years, searching her face for any hint of a joke, a test, a misunderstanding. There was only a cold, set finality in her expression.

“Five years,” he stated, the number flat and meaningless on his tongue. He took a step closer, stopping just across the glass table from her. “Five years of my life I gave to your family. Five years of non-stop work, fighting tooth and nail, clawing this failing business back from the brink of bankruptcy. Five years of ‘stability’—that was the word you used when you asked me to marry you, wasn’t it? You swore to me this was a partnership, a lifetime commitment to secure both our futures. And this is it? A discarded envelope with annulment papers inside?”

A muscle twitched violently in Mikael’s jaw. His control was fraying, but he forced his voice to remain steady, refusing to give her the satisfaction of seeing him break down.

“Tell me what changed, Aria,” he demanded. “After tonight’s success? The Aethel deal gives us a clear path for the next decade. Everything we worked for, everything I worked for, is finally secure. Why now? Why tonight?”

Aria’s composure finally cracked. Her voice rose in pitch, sharp with defensive frustration. “It is a strategic decision for the business, Mikael. Nothing more, nothing less. Please, do not try to make this difficult or emotional. It serves no purpose now. You have done exactly what you were asked to do. You stabilized the finances, you secured the key contracts, you elevated the stock value. You were… useful. Exceedingly useful, in fact. My father is very pleased with your performance.”

“Useful,” Mikael echoed, the word sounding like a profound insult. He slammed his hand down on the glass table, making the champagne flutes jump and clatter. “Useful is that all you have to say to me, Aria? After five years of sharing a name, a bed, a life? Did any of it ever mean anything to you? Did you ever look at me and see a man, a husband, or was I always just an asset you could liquidate when my purpose was fulfilled? Look at me and answer that, Aria. Look at me!”

Just before he could finish, the heavy oak door behind him opened without a knock. Arthur Elston, Aria’s father and the CEO, walked into the room, followed immediately by two grim-faced security guards who moved with cold efficiency to position themselves by the entrance. Arthur wore a smug, utterly relaxed expression, a stark, infuriating contrast to Aria’s palpable tension and Mikael’s controlled fury.

“Useful, indeed,” Arthur boomed, his voice loud and condescending. He walked directly to the liquor cabinet, ignoring Mikael completely, and poured himself a generous measure of top-shelf scotch. He didn’t offer a drink to his son-in-law. “Aria, run along now. Go on. Mikael and I have some final, rather tiresome business to conclude. We will handle the paperwork.”

Aria looked from her father, whose gaze was now fixed on the amber liquid in his glass, to her husband, whose eyes held a dangerous, burning intensity. She hesitated for only a fraction of a second, her hands tightening on the small handbag she held, before she quickly turned and headed for the door, walking out of the room without another word, without a backward glance, leaving Mikael utterly alone to face the consequences.

Mikael stood still for a long moment, the silence of Aria’s betrayal ringing louder than any shouted argument. Then he turned slowly to face Arthur, his jaw tight, his shoulders squared.

“I want an explanation, Father-in-law,” Mikael said, emphasizing the title with blistering sarcasm. He watched Arthur take a long, slow sip of his drink, swirling the dark liquid in the glass before finally setting it down on the counter. “I brought your company back from the brink of total collapse. I just closed the Aethel deal, which gives you more leverage than you’ve had in two decades. You owe me more than a pathetic, unsigned note delivered by your daughter. What is this ‘final business’?”

Arthur leaned back against the counter, his eyes scrutinizing Mikael from head to toe, a look of utter, casual disdain settling on his face. He smiled, and the expression was cold and reptilian.

“Don’t be sentimental, Mikael. Sentiment is for fools, and you were always supposed to be sharper than that,” Arthur sneered. “And please, who are you calling your father-in-law? That’s a truly rich name coming from a piece of refuse like you. You were perfect for us precisely because you had no sentiment, no pride, no shame, and nothing—absolutely nothing—to lose.”

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  • 9

    As Mikael stepped out from the quiet corner where he had been speaking with Thompson, the atmosphere in the sterile emergency room instantly changed. A wave of men, impeccably dressed and intensely serious, flowed rapidly through the hospital entrance. They were not doctors or patients; they were a private security force, quickly and efficiently commanding the space. Mikael looked sharply at Thompson. “What is happening? I thought I ordered absolute discretion.” Thompson looked bewildered for a fleeting moment. “I don’t know, sir. This wasn't us.” Then, as the men reached the reception area and gathered in front of the examination room where Helen was being treated, they suddenly and respectfully parted, creating a wide path. An elderly man in his late fifties walked in. He moved with the quiet, unquestionable authority of true power. As soon as Mikael saw him, he felt a cold certainty: this was Mr. Charles, the patriarch of the Charles empire, the man Mikael had always desperate

  • 8

    Chapter Seven: The Weight of Responsibility (Rewritten)The emergency room felt very strange and cold, a huge contrast to the warm, fancy McPherson Bar. The air smelled strongly of hospital soap and sadness. Mikael stood still by the main desk, wearing his simple dark T-shirt and jeans, with Miss Helen Charles still held safely in his arms. Mr. Thompson and two of the security men stood back, quietly watching everything.The nurse at the desk was surprised by the sudden, important-looking group, but she quickly got back to work and pushed a hospital bed on wheels forward. Mikael gently placed Miss Charles down on the bed. As he did, her eyes opened a little.“Where… what happened, Drayson?” she whispered, her voice tight with pain. She looked at Mikael, confusion replacing the panic in her eyes.“You took a bad fall, Miss Charles,” Mikael explained, his face calm and showing no emotion. “You’re at the hospital. Don’t try to move. We need to check you completely to make sure you are ok

  • 7

    Mikael pushed Mr. Thompson aside with a firm, decisive movement and started walking toward the commotion at the front of the bar. His twelve security and logistics men, all dressed in dark, expensive suits, immediately rose to follow him, a silent, intimidating wall of focused muscle. Mikael stopped them with a quick, subtle gesture of his hand. He wanted to handle this situation alone.He was dressed in simple, casual clothes...a dark T-shirt and jeans.....but the quiet intensity of his walk commanded immediate, sharp attention. His focus was absolute, his eyes fixed on the man who was still hovering over the fallen woman.Mikael reached the scene of the dispute, walking directly up to the hulking bouncer. “What exactly is happening here?” he demanded, his voice low and cutting.The bouncer, sizing up Mikael’s plain attire and ignoring his commanding tone.....mistaking him for a regular patron.....looked at him with clear annoyance and dismissiveness. “Mind your business, pal. We’re

  • 6

    .” Thompson held the car door open for Mikael, and they both climbed into the nearest sedan, the convoy starting its movement immediately. “How?” Mikael asked, his gaze fixed on the older man. “By involving the Charles family? Do you know what kind of power she has? This complicates everything.” “Believe me, I didn't willingly tell her about you, sir. She approached me with the information. She came up with the final plan that ensures your absolute freedom. You died,” Thompson said simply, sliding a set of official-looking documents and a grainy photograph across to Mikael as the car drove smoothly through the night. “A cellmate, ‘driven to fall’ by the harsh prison life, took his own life last night. Unfortunately, the circumstances were so messy that the body is ‘unidentifiable’ until an autopsy is completed. The news is already making its way through the right, bribed channels. Mikael Dray is officially gone forever.” Mikael picked up the photograph. It was blurry, showing

  • 5

    “The world isn’t the same as you left it years ago. While you were… indisposed, the Arthur Elston family got completely crushed by a series of corporate scandals, but his daughter, Aria, is still surprisingly standing. And now Arthur is maneuvering to get into politics. All these four years you spent in jail, a lot of intense things happened.” Mikael skimmed the headline: a devastating financial collapse followed by a political pivot. Arthur hadn't been defeated, he had merely shifted his battleground. “So, why are you helping me?” Mikael asked, handing the tablet back. “Why did you go to this massive, dangerous length to get me out?” Helen gave him a look of cool exasperation. “Enough with the pretense, Mr. Dray. I know exactly who you are. You can drop the act of the confused, falsely accused ex-CEO.” “What act are you talking about?” Mikael countered, his voice sharp. He was instinctively hiding his real identity, the identity Thompson was the only one who truly knew. “I si

  • 4

    The City Prosecution Office interrogation room was small and suffocating. Mikael felt the sheer, crushing power of the Elston Group’s influence closing in around him. Mrs. Vivian Cole, the prosecutor, presented the evidence with cold, surgical precision. Every piece of data bank transfers, email authorizations, meeting minutes—had been expertly manipulated to point directly, irrevocably at Mikael Dray. “Your defense is that you were stealing from the company that owned you. The jury will see that as an act of calculated greed and final spite, Mr. Dray,” Mrs. Cole finished, stacking her documents neatly. “The case against you is overwhelming.” Before Mikael could mount a further, desperate defense, the door opened, and a bailiff escorted a woman into the room. Aria. Mikael’s ex-wife looked stunning, dressed in a black suit that seemed to mourn his situation while perfectly celebrating her freedom from him. Her expression was meticulously composed, showing only a slight, trembli

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