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Camille Lockhart wondered, not for the first time, what a truly married couple looked like. Did the wife wake up to warm arms and softer kisses? Did the husband look at her like she was the only woman breathing on earth? Or was marriage simply this — two strangers sharing the same expensive cage, breathing the same air but never truly knowing what love really is?
The sound of the walk-in closet door opening pulled her from her thoughts.
Her husband, Roderick King stepped out, fully dressed in a tailored black suit that hugged his broad shoulders and narrow waist like it had been sewn onto his body.
His dark hair was perfectly styled, and his sharp jawline caught the light as he adjusted his cufflinks. He looked like a Greek god who had decided to walk among mortals — devastatingly handsome, coldly distant, and completely untouchable.
Camille’s heart gave its usual traitorous flutter before reality settled back in like a stone in her chest.
“I’ll be home late,” He said, voice deep and low, eyes fixed on his reflection in the mirror rather than on her.
“Don’t forget about tonight. You’ll be home, right?”She swallowed.
He was silent for a long moment, long enough for the hope in her chest to twist into something painful. Finally, he answered without turning around.
“Probably.”
“Probably?” Her voice cracked despite herself. “Roderick, you’re not planning on missing it again? It’s our special night.”
He exhaled sharply, the sound laced with irritation. “It’s too early to disturb me with your endless nagging, Camille. I already gave you my reply. What more do you want?”
The words landed like tiny cuts across her skin. She bit her lip hard enough to taste the faint metallic tang of blood.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered.
Without another word, Roderick picked up his briefcase and walked out of the bedroom, not sparing her a single glance. The heavy door clicked shut behind him, and the silence that followed felt louder than any argument.
Camille remained standing in the middle of the room, arms wrapped around herself as if trying to hold her breaking pieces together. Three years. Three years of this.
She had once believed marriage would be different — that love, even if it started small, would grow. But Roderick had never loved her. He possessed her, he controlled her, he displayed her like a rare painting on his wall: beautiful, expensive, and meant to be admired only by him.
Being in this loveless marriage had reshaped everything she once believed about soulmates. Was there a rulebook somewhere that said a husband should treat his wife like a tool instead of a partner?
Did the vows include the right to keep her locked away while he lived freely? Did “till death do us part” mean she had to slowly die inside while smiling for the world?
On the surface, people envied her as Roderick King’s wife. The young beauty who never had to lift a finger. No job or harsh responsibilities outside these walls. A villa that looked like it belonged in a dream. Designer clothes, jewelry that could buy small countries....but the truth was far uglier.
This marriage was a golden cage.
Roderick didn’t let her work. He had made that clear from the beginning. “My wife doesn’t need to embarrass me by playing career woman.”
Her bank accounts were in his name. Every expense, every purchase, every withdrawal required his approval. She couldn’t even leave the villa without his permission unless it was for something that directly benefited him — charity events where she played the perfect, silent wife, or business dinners where she was expected to smile and look ornamental.
He was obsessed with the idea of her. Obsessed with how gorgeous she looked on his arm. Obsessed with keeping her untouched by the outside world. The few times she had dared suggest going out with old friends, his response had been ice-cold and final.
Camille turned toward the full-length mirror and stared at her reflection. Even now, after three years of emotional starvation, she was still beautiful — smooth pale skin that glowed under the light, full lips, and curves that made the most expensive dresses look sinful.
But what was the use of beauty when the man who owned it treated her like a furniture?
Tonight was their third anniversary.
She spent the rest of the day in quiet preparation, refusing to let the morning’s humiliation ruin the night completely.
By seven-thirty, she chose a deep emerald green gown that clung to her body and made her eyes look brighter. She pinned her hair up elegantly, applied soft makeup, and sprayed the perfume he once said he liked — even though she no longer wore it for him.
She wore it for the version of herself that still hoped for his love.
She checked her phone again. The last message she had sent him was a gentle reminder about dinner — showed two blue ticks. Viewed but no reply.
Her chest tightened.
She left the master bedroom and descended the grand staircase, the sound of her heels echoing through the vast, empty villa. The maids had set up an intimate candlelit dinner on the glass-enclosed terrace overlooking the private garden.
Her favorite roses filled the center of the table.
“Ma’am,” One of the maids greeted her with a polite smile. “Everything is ready.”
“Thank you,” Camille said softly, managing a small smile she didn’t feel.
She sat down.
The candles burned lower. The food grew cold under silver covers. Minutes stretched into an hour. Then two.
Humiliation burned in her throat. She kept her spine straight, refusing to let the staff see her cry, but inside, something was quietly shattering.
How many times had she sat like this? Waiting for a man who never acknowledged her? How long would she remain a beautiful accessory he could ignore until he needed her to warm his bed?
Tonight, something felt different.
The ache in her chest wasn’t just sadness anymore. It was anger, it was exhaustion. It was the slow, terrifying realization that she could not and would not survive another year like this.
Camille stared at the untouched plates, at the flickering candles, at the empty chair across from her.
Did Roderick seriously forget that he should be here tonight? She thought.
Roderick sat in his study, the only light coming from the desk lamp that cast long shadows across the walls. He hadn’t moved much in the last hour, just staring at the maps and phone logs spread in front of him. The silence in the penthouse was heavy. Adrian was asleep down the hall, but every second without word about Camille made his chest feel tighter.The door opened quietly. Ten stepped inside, closing it behind him.“Any update?” Roderick asked, voice low and rough as he looked up.Ten stopped a few steps from the desk. “Miguel isn’t at his place. We searched it top to bottom. I also reached out to your father but he hasn’t seen him at all.”Roderick’s fist tightened. He leaned back in the chair, rubbing a hand over his face. “What about Vanessa?”“She’s been with Sir Victor the whole time. Says she doesn’t know anything about where Miguel went.”Roderick gave a short, humorless laugh. “I doubt she doesn’t know where her son is. I’ve been calling him nonstop and he isn’t pickin
Ten’s three men each grabbed two heavy duffle bags, lifting them without a word. They filed out of the apartment one by one, their footsteps heavy on the hallway floor as they headed back down the stairs. The door clicked shut behind the last man, leaving the living room silent except for the low hum of the air conditioner.Now it was just Ten and Nathan.Ten pulled out his phone, eyes never leaving the man in front of him. He dialed and pressed it to his ear.“Boss,” Ten’s voice was calm and flat. “I already got the bastard behind this entire mess. They never cease to amaze me.”He kept his gaze locked on Nathan, who stood frozen near the couch, breathing faster now. Ten hung up without waiting for a reply, he sent a text and slipped the phone back into his pocket.“You should know by now that this is your end, Nathan,” Ten said, stepping forward slowly. “Both you and Taylor are going to rot in jail. You must be stupid to think you could get away with this.”Nathan’s face twisted. F
Ten sat in the back of the blacked-out van parked in the shadows just outside the park’s perimeter fence. The interior was dim, lit only by the glow of his laptop screen. Four of his men waited silently around him, weapons checked and ready. His eyes stayed locked on the red dot pulsing on the tracker map. For long minutes, nothing moved. Then the dot shifted.“They’re on the move,” Ten said, his voice low and steady, no wasted words. “Drive and follow them discreetly. Make sure to keep your distance to avoid suspicion.”The van rolled forward smoothly, headlights off, blending into the evening traffic as they tailed the kidnappers’ vehicle from several blocks back. Ten’s fingers tapped lightly on the laptop edge, calm and focused. The drive took them through the outskirts of Crown City, away from bright lights and into decaying industrial zones. Old warehouses and forgotten buildings loomed under flickering streetlamps. The kidnappers’ car finally slowed and turned into a cracke
Roderick stood in the study, one hand braced on the edge of the desk. Ten waited in front of him, arms at his sides, face calm and focused like always. Roderick spoke first. “The kidnappers want Camille to bring the money. They made it clear that they won't be releasing the kids if Camille doesn't bring the money herself.”He paused, fingers pressing harder into the wood. The thought kept turning in his head — they specifically asked for her. It could mean they wanted someone weaker to carry the bags. Or it could mean something worse. He didn’t like any of it. He didn’t like sending her in there at all. But if he fought her on it right now, she wouldn't listen, and they couldn’t afford delays.“Understood, boss. So, what are your plans on catching the kidnappers? It's already very obvious that we can't follow her inside the park.” Ten said.“The park is isolated so you won’t be able to get close without them noticing. Once the kidnappers move the money away from the location in the
Taylor pushed the door open and stepped into Nathan’s apartment. She dropped her bag on the couch and stood there for a moment, staring at the floor. Nathan closed the door behind them. The lock clicked loudly in the quiet room.“Why did you agree to Miguel’s plan, huh?” Taylor asked, turning to face him. “It might complicate things. We were already so close.”Nathan walked to the kitchen counter and poured himself a glass of water. He drank half of it before answering. “He could have snitched. The last thing we want is him being a hindrance to our plans. We’re already so close.”Taylor started pacing. Her heels clicked against the floor with every step. “We don’t need him. We had a plan. A clean one at that. Now he’s in the middle of it, and he’s mentally unstable if you ask me. You saw how he looked when he talked about Camille. He’s obsessed, and he could ruin the whole thing just to get her.”Nathan set the glass down. “And if we said no, he could have gone straight to Roderick
Nathan and Taylor sat on one couch, while Camille sat on the opposite one, hands clasped tightly in her lap, looking at them. Roderick stood in front of them, arms crossed, his presence filling the entire space.“I already have the ransom money ready,” Roderick said, his voice coming out steady and cold. “All we have to do is wait for the kidnappers to call and inform us about the time and location.”Taylor shifted uncomfortably on the couch, fingers twisting together. “Who’s going to deliver the money?”“I can coordinate and deliver it myself. That’s the least I could do to help get our daughter back.” Nathan leaned forward, trying to sound helpful.Roderick’s eyes narrowed slightly. “I’ll be the one to do that. I’ll deliver the money to them myself. I want to see the kidnappers with my own eyes and ensure the children’s safety.”“I want to do it. I want to see Adrian as soon as possible. I want to make sure he's okay.” Camille stood up immediately.Roderick turned to her, his expres
Camille stood in the middle of the living room, arms wrapped tightly around herself. Her eyes were red from crying, but she forced herself to stay focused.She moved back to Roderick as soon as he finished the call.“What do they want?” she asked, voice trembling.Roderick ran a hand through his ha
Roderick King woke up to an empty bed.The space beside him was cold, the sheets untouched. His eyes narrowed as he sat up, scanning the room. That was when he saw it — Camille’s wedding ring, placed neatly on the bedside desk like a quiet declaration of war. He stared at it for several seconds. D
“A divorce?” Roderick asked like he didn't hear her the first time. “Is this some kind of joke? Not a good time to play silly games with me, Camille.”Camille lifted her chin, even as fresh tears burned her eyes. “I said I want a divorce. Does that sound like a joke to you, Roderick?”He stared at
Camille sat on the edge of the king-sized bed, phone clutched tightly in her hand as the clock struck 10:17 p.m. She had called Roderick’s line twenty-three times. Twenty-three unanswered calls. Each one rang until it went to voicemail, his deep voice coolly instructing callers to leave a message.







