Beaten By the Billionaire's Wife / Chapter 1: Yellow Means Stop—Or Else
Beaten By the Billionaire's Wife

Beaten By the Billionaire's Wife

Author: Michael Baker


Chapter 1: Yellow Means Stop—Or Else

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The light flashed yellow. My foot slammed the brake. A split-second later—crash. Metal screamed behind me.

The impact rattled every bone in my body, my heart leaping into my throat. The only sound was the tick of my blinker and my sharp, panicked breath. Outside, everything froze beneath the flicker of a broken streetlamp, the world hushed except for the groan of metal against metal. My fingers fumbled with the seatbelt, numb and tingling. Was I bleeding? Was I even alive? I forced myself to breathe, hands trembling as I reached for the door handle, bracing for the storm outside.

I stepped out to check the damage. The car that hit me was a Porsche.

Its front end was crumpled, the paint catching the harsh glare of the streetlights. My battered Honda looked like it had wandered into the wrong neighborhood. The Porsche’s license plate read "GRL BOSS." Of course. Because why wouldn’t my first accident be with someone who probably hashtags #BossBabe on every post? My breath puffed in the cold night air as I walked closer, dread pooling in my gut at the thought of insurance calls and repair bills.

The Porsche owner strutted over—iced coffee in one hand, sunglasses on (at night), high heels tapping the asphalt like gunshots. She jabbed a finger in my face and snapped, "What the hell is wrong with you? Yellow means go, genius! Ever heard of that?"

She looked like she’d just walked off a reality show set—designer trench, flawless hair, and an attitude that said money solves everything. Her sunglasses caught the glow of the red light, and her iced coffee sloshed dangerously as she waved it around. A gust of wind carried her sugary perfume, cloying and thick, as if she needed another way to crowd out the world. My jaw locked, trying not to rise to her bait, but my nerves were shot.

"A yellow light means stop," I said, voice steady only because I forced it.

For a moment, she looked like she might actually listen. Then her lips curled into a sneer.

Without warning, she threw her iced coffee right in my face.

The cold hit me like a slap. For a second, I wasn’t sure if I was going to cry or just freeze solid. The freezing liquid splattered across my cheeks and shirt, stinging my eyes and running down onto the cracked pavement. Bitter coffee clung to my lips. My glasses fogged instantly, and I just stood there, dripping and shocked, the chill crawling under my skin. I heard ice cubes skitter across the asphalt as my mind tried to catch up.

She screamed, "If you can’t drive, get off the road! You even wrecked my car. Go home and tell your mom she gave birth to a total idiot. There’s a yellow light and you don’t know to speed up? Out here endangering society!"

Her words came in a relentless, shrill wave, louder with every insult. My face burned—where the coffee hadn’t stung, her humiliation did. Her voice bounced off the empty Walgreens across the street, loud enough to wake the whole block—if anyone was actually awake at this hour. She looked me up and down, disgusted, like she couldn’t believe someone like me even deserved to share the road with her Porsche.

I wiped the coffee from my face, my whole body shaking with rage.

Every muscle in me was tight, fighting the urge to yell right back. My hand trembled as I tried to clear the sticky mess from my chin. A dozen comebacks flashed through my head, but none made it past my lips. The world felt unfair and too bright, the streetlights bearing witness to my humiliation.

Mr. Carter, my old driver’s ed teacher, used to say: “Yellow means slow down, not play chicken.” His voice echoed in my head, steadier than mine. I balled my fists at my sides, clinging to the knowledge I’d done the right thing.

Everyone knows you’re supposed to slow down at intersections, but most people treat a yellow like a green flag. I’d seen it a hundred times—engines roaring, drivers pushing their luck. I never got it. Now, I was the one paying for someone else’s need for speed.

This Porsche owner saw the yellow, floored it, and didn’t expect me to brake. So she crashed right into me.

It was the classic showdown: her pedal-to-the-metal entitlement versus my play-it-safe instincts. I’d caught her headlights in my rearview, but I never thought she’d actually hit me. The whole thing kept replaying in my mind—the surge, the crunch, the shock.

Usually, this stuff only happens in viral dashcam clips on Facebook, where everyone’s got an opinion and nobody agrees. But tonight, I was the guy standing in the rain, soaked in coffee, starring in my own nightmare. The line between TV drama and real life had vanished, and I was the unlucky star.

The Porsche owner glared at her car, then at me. "I wish I could skin you alive! Driving some piece of junk barely worth twenty grand—poor and uncivilized."

Her voice cracked on "uncivilized," dripping with disgust. She looked at my Honda like it was contagious. Her manicured fists clenched, diamond ring flashing in the streetlight. She glanced around, maybe hoping for an audience to see her outrage.

"I’m not going to argue with you. I’m calling the police," I said, voice low but steady. I didn’t want to give her the satisfaction of seeing me lose it. Fishing my phone from my pocket, I tried to dial 911 with hands still sticky from coffee.

As soon as I tried, she snapped. She lunged, grabbed my phone, and smashed it to the ground. "Call the police, my ass!"

She moved so fast, I barely had time to react. Her heels dug into the pavement as she snatched the phone from my hand and hurled it down. The phone hit the asphalt with a sickening crunch, the screen spiderwebbing in a heartbeat. I just stared, disbelief and helplessness freezing me in place. I watched my phone shatter, like watching my last lifeline snap. No calls. No photos. No proof.

She shrieked, "You wrecked my car and you have the nerve to call the police? If you don’t have any manners, don’t drive! It’s two in the morning, no one else on the road, and you slam on the brakes!"

She was screaming, her voice bouncing off empty storefronts and echoing down the block. I could smell the alcohol on her breath—sharp, sour, unmistakable. Her words were wild, but the rage in her eyes was clear. She jabbed a finger at my chest, like she could knock me down by willpower alone.

I was completely stunned.

My mouth hung open. Every word—apology, explanation, defense—had vanished. I couldn’t find my voice, couldn’t process how this was really happening. In all my years behind the wheel, nothing had prepared me for this kind of crazy.

I never thought she’d actually get physical.

This wasn’t just a shouting match—it was something raw and violent. I stepped back, hands up, praying it would be enough to keep her away. My heart thundered, and I wanted to run.

I didn’t want to fight. Because if a man hits a woman, it’s nearly impossible to be judged as self-defense.

A thousand warnings flashed through my mind—news stories, my mom’s advice, that dread every guy feels in these moments. Even if she threw the first punch, I knew how these things played out. The world isn’t fair, not for men in these situations.

I pushed her away, trying to get back in my car.

My hand barely nudged her, but she wobbled on her heels and hit the ground. Guilt and fear tangled inside—had I hurt her, or would she just use this against me? Either way, I needed out.

But she was in heels, unsteady, and I accidentally knocked her down.

She hit the pavement with a gasp, her purse spilling lipsticks and receipts everywhere. For a second she looked shocked—then her face twisted in rage, mascara running as she scrambled up.

She got up, hair wild, and came at me again, pounding on my car window with everything she had.

She hit my window like a hurricane, fists thumping, curses pouring out in a wild, barely coherent rant. The noise rattled through my chest. I pressed back against the seat, hands locked on the wheel, trying to block out the storm.

She shrieked, "Get out here! You have the guts to hit someone but not the guts to come out?"

Her shrieks could have woken the whole block, if anyone was around. Each word was a blade. I wanted to shout back that I hadn’t hit her, but I was too afraid to make it worse.

I was dumbfounded. When did I hit her? She was the one hitting me.

It was surreal—like she was living in a different universe. I replayed it all in my head, sure I hadn’t hurt her except for that accidental nudge. My sense of justice felt battered and small.

I wanted to call the police, but my phone was toast. I couldn’t fathom why she was this furious.

Panic set in as I stared at the shattered phone. I’d always thought help was a tap away. Now I was stranded in this concrete wilderness, at the mercy of a stranger’s madness.

Isn’t a car accident supposed to be about calling the police and insurance?

It seemed so simple—swap info, file a claim, let the system work. But tonight, the rulebook was out the window.

She kept smashing my window, screaming, "Do you know how much it costs to fix my car?"

Each blow sent a shiver down my spine. Her shrieks now mingled with sobs. For the first time, I wondered if she was more afraid than angry. The Porsche gleamed under the light, a monument to her shattered pride.

A chill ran through me.

The air felt heavier, colder, as I tried to piece together her wildness. Something told me this wasn’t just about money or status. I scanned the empty street, desperate for a witness or a camera.

She’s this hysterical—maybe she didn’t buy collision insurance?

It clicked: the fear, the rage, the way she kept shouting about repair costs. If she was uninsured, she’d be on the hook for everything. Panic leaked through her bravado.

If not, she’d have to pay a fortune to fix her Porsche herself.

A Porsche isn’t just a car—it’s a statement. The people who drive them aren’t used to losing, especially to someone like me. If she had to cough up ten grand or more, it’d sting worse than any bruise.

Nearly half the drivers in this country don’t buy collision insurance. They gamble, thinking careful driving is enough. But luck runs out.

I remembered some article about Americans rolling the dice with their insurance. Tonight, luck had caught up with her—and me.

It makes sense—save thousands a year, unless something goes wrong.

My own agent had tried to sell me extra coverage. I’d shrugged it off, but now I realized how thin the line is between peace of mind and disaster.

This woman was terrifying.

Her energy was wild, unpredictable—a tornado about to sweep me away. I shrank, wishing I could vanish into my seat.

While pounding my window, she whipped out her phone and started filming me.

Her manicured hand hovered at the edge of my window, phone ready to catch every second. I saw my reflection in her lens: wild-eyed, coffee-soaked, trapped. One wrong move and I’d be viral for all the wrong reasons.

Her face—twisted, caked in makeup—looked just like that infamous Porsche woman from a Miami viral video, the one who smashed a car window on camera, bragging, "Haha, ruining you is just a matter of a hundred grand."

It was the kind of clip that blows up on TikTok, gets dissected by morning radio shows. Her sneer matched the one from the video exactly, down to the hair flip. My blood ran cold, wondering if I’d be the next trending hashtag.

The sight of her made my scalp tingle with fear.

A primal dread crawled up my spine—the kind that tells you to run, even when you can’t. My breath quickened, and I realized I was shaking. The night felt darker, the city too big, the world suddenly very small.

I rolled the window down a crack, pleading, "Can’t we just call the police and talk this out? You crashed into me. Let the police decide."

I tried to sound calm, forcing out each word like it might save me. My hands trembled on the window switch, praying she’d listen, that reason might break through her anger.

She spat, "There were still three seconds before the light turned red, and you hit the damn brakes? Did your mom forget to give you guts when she had you, letting a coward like you endanger everyone on the road?"

Her words cut like broken glass. She laughed, mocking not just my driving, but my whole existence. The streetlight glinted in her eyes, hard and merciless. Her voice was sharp as a whip, every syllable meant to strip me bare.

I clenched my fists, telling myself over and over not to hit a woman.

Anger surged, wild and hot in my chest. But I dug my nails into my palms, repeating every lesson about self-control. My father’s voice echoed: “Never lay a hand on a woman, no matter what.”

You have to brake at a yellow. That’s how you build safe habits. Once you start driving dangerously, it’s only a matter of time before disaster.

It wasn’t just a rule—it was muscle memory, the discipline my mom drilled into me. I reminded myself I’d done the right thing, even if no one else cared.

"This is a country governed by law. Are you really going to assault people?" My voice shook but stayed clear, hoping the words would anchor us in reality.

She sneered, "So what if I beat you to death? I can afford to fix my Porsche, and I can afford to pay if I kill you."

Her words sent a chill down my spine. It wasn’t just arrogance—it was real menace. She flicked her wrist, like my life was nothing but a scratch on her fender.

I couldn’t help myself. "Your car’s only worth a few hundred grand—what are you showing off for?"

Her face froze.

She went absolutely still, lips parting in shock. I’d hit a nerve. The silence was heavy, crackling. My heart pounded, wondering if I’d just made things worse.

Seconds later, she went berserk, smashing my window again and again.

Her fists became hammers, her voice a siren. She screamed inarticulate rage, her anger turning to violence. The glass began to spiderweb, cracks blooming under her blows. I shrank into my seat, praying it would hold.

She shrieked, "Whose car is only worth a few hundred grand? Come down here and open your damn eyes! This isn’t a Cayman, it’s a 911! The repair bill alone could hire someone to ruin your life!"

Her voice was nearly hysterical, pride bleeding through fury. She rattled off numbers and models as if I should care, as if her 911 badge was a birthright.

I had no idea what the difference between a Cayman and a 911 was. Not every guy is a car nut. I wouldn’t waste time researching cars I can’t afford.

I shrugged inside. My own car’s check engine light had been on for weeks and I hadn’t even googled it. Some people lived in a different universe.

I didn’t know such a simple comment could offend her so deeply.

To her, it wasn’t just about the car—it was about respect, or the illusion of it. I’d accidentally stepped on her pride, and now she wanted me to pay.

Turns out, even among Porsches, there’s a pecking order.

It was absurd—the kind of thing you’d joke about in a bar, but here, it was deadly serious.

I thought she was deranged. I wanted to drive away, but I couldn’t.

The urge to escape was overwhelming, but my legs felt like lead. I looked at my keyless ignition, a knot in my gut.

My car starts with my phone, so I didn’t bring the key.

Of all nights to leave the physical key at home, it had to be tonight. The tech that made my life easy now had me trapped, helpless.

When the crash happened, I’d instinctively shut off the engine for safety.

It was a habit drilled in by years of safe driving videos and parental nagging: turn off the engine, put on the hazards, stay calm. It was supposed to protect me. Instead, it had sealed me inside my own car.

Now, the car had timed out. To restart it, I needed my phone—which she’d already smashed.

It was like a bad joke. I stared at the dead screen, heart sinking. No phone, no key, no escape. I was as stuck as anyone could be, a modern-day knight trapped by his own armor.

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