LOGINRAINA
When morning finally came, the house was quiet.
I woke up in severe pain.
My face was swollen. When I touched my cheek, it felt hot and puffy. My lip was crusted with dried blood. My wrists ached from where the guards had grabbed me.
But the worst pain was inside my chest. A hollow, burning feeling that wouldn't go away.
The door unlocked.
I sat up quickly, my heart pounding.
Castor walked in. He looked tired, his hair messy, his shirt wrinkled. Like he had been up all night.
He probably had been.
He looked at me for a long moment. His eyes traveled over my swollen face, my bruised wrists, my tangled hair.
"I didn't mean to be so hard on you," he said finally. His voice was almost gentle. Almost. "But you pushed me too far, Raina."
I stared at him. Was he serious?
"If you're obedient and play nice, I won't have to be rough with you again." He straightened his cuffs. "It's really up to you."
Hatred burned through my chest. Hot and fierce and consuming.
I wanted to scream at him. To claw his eyes out. To make him feel even a fraction of what he had done to me.
But I stayed quiet.
Because I was learning.
"We have Judge Henderson coming for dinner tonight," he continued. "So I need you to freshen up. Look presentable. Can you do that?"
"Yes," I said quietly.
"Good." He moved toward the door. "I'll have Maria bring you some clothes. And Raina? Cover those bruises. I don't want questions."
Then he left.
I sat there for a long time, staring at nothing.
Then I got up and went to the small bathroom attached to the room.
The mirror showed me a stranger.
My left eye was purple and swollen. My cheek was dark with bruising. My lip was split and scabbed.
I looked like a victim.
I looked exactly like what I was.
But tonight, I had to look like the happy wife again.
Maria brought me clothes and makeup. She also brought an ice pack without being asked.
"For the swelling," she whispered. "I'm so sorry, Mrs. Rowland."
"Thank you, Maria."
She hesitated at the door. "If you need anything. Anything at all. Some of us... we see what's happening. We want to help."
But then she left before I could respond.
I spent an hour getting ready.
Foundation. Lots of foundation. Layer after layer to hide the purple bruise under my eye.
Concealer for the dark patches on my cheeks.
Red lipstick to draw attention away from the split in my lip.
Powder to set everything in place.
I built the mask carefully. Precisely.
When I was done, I looked almost normal. Almost.
If you didn't look too close.
I stared at my reflection. Perfect on the surface. Broken underneath.
Something inside me hardened.
I was done being the victim in his performance.
Done being the prop in his political theater.
Something had to change.
***
Dinner was torture.
Castor sat next to me at the table, playing the loving husband. He touched my hand. He smiled at me. He even pulled out my chair.
All of it was fake.
I wanted to vomit.
Judge Henderson was a large man with white hair and a booming laugh. His wife, Patricia, was quieter. She had kind eyes that made me nervous.
Kind eyes that saw too much.
Throughout dinner, Castor fussed over me. "More wine, darling? Are you comfortable? You look beautiful tonight."
Each word felt like acid on my skin.
But I smiled. I laughed at his jokes. I played my part.
Until Patricia Henderson leaned forward and studied my face.
"Raina, dear," she said gently. "What happened to your lip?"
Under the table, Castor's foot pressed against mine. Hard.
A warning.
"Oh, this?" I touched my mouth lightly. "I'm so clumsy. I slipped in the bathroom this morning and hit the counter."
Patricia's eyes narrowed slightly. Her gaze moved to the shadow under my eye that the foundation couldn't quite hide.
"That looks painful," she said slowly.
"It's nothing," I said quickly. "Really."
But she kept looking at me. Like she was trying to read a message in my face.
Castor squeezed my knee under the table. His fingers dug in until it hurt.
"My wife is always running around, doing charity work," he said smoothly. "She forgets to slow down sometimes. I keep telling her to be more careful."
"I'm sure you do," Patricia said. But something in her voice made me think she didn't believe him.
The rest of dinner passed in a blur. I barely tasted the food.
Finally, they were getting ready to leave.
Patricia took my hand as we stood by the door.
"It was lovely to see you again," she said. Then, quieter, so only I could hear: "My daughter runs a shelter for women. If you ever need help. With anything."
She pressed a small card into my palm.
I closed my fist around it quickly before Castor could see.
"Thank you," I whispered.
When they were gone, Castor turned on me immediately.
"You were too quiet at dinner," he snapped.
"I spoke when spoken to."
"You didn't look happy enough. Patricia was watching you like a hawk. Did you say something to her?"
"No. I didn't say anything."
"You better not have." He stepped closer. "Because if you think you can embarrass me, think again. I'll make your family suffer for every mistake you make."
My hands clenched at my sides.
"Do you understand me?" he demanded.
"Yes."
"Good. Because let me make something very clear." His voice dropped low and dangerous. "You are replaceable, Raina. There are plenty of poor, desperate girls out there who would be grateful for what I'm offering. Don't make me regret choosing you."
That's what broke me.
The idea that I was nothing. That he could just throw me away and find another victim to trap.
"Get out of my sight," he said. "You disgust me."
I went back to the guest room, my whole body shaking.
I locked the door and leaned against it, trying to breathe.
Then I remembered.
Sylvester's card.
I had kept it in my purse, hidden in a zippered pocket where Castor would never look.
I pulled it out now with trembling hands.
His words came back to me. "You could fight back."
"Stop being his victim."
"Call me when you're ready."
My hands shook as I pulled out my phone.
I stared at the number for a long time.
This was dangerous. If Castor found out, he would destroy everything. My family would lose everything.
But I couldn't do this anymore.
I couldn't survive five more years.
I couldn't even survive five more weeks.
So I dialed the number.
It rang once.
Twice.
Then his voice, deep and low: "I was wondering when you'd call."
Just hearing him made something in my chest loosen. Like I could finally breathe.
"I'm ready," I whispered. "I'm ready to fight."
A pause. Then his voice came again, warm and certain.
"Good. Because I've been waiting for you, Raina."
Something in the way he said my name made my heart skip.
Not with fear this time.
With something else. Something that made my skin burn and my breath catch.
RAINAThree days later and Sylvester's words still sat in my head like a stubborn headache.I hadn't deleted those texts, couldn't bring myself to stop staring at them.Like a dam being let loose, he'd said all the things he wanted to do to me.And what was worse? I couldn't tell him to stop.He'd thrown the decision into my lap and walked away.~Tell me you don't want me.~I hadn't answered.Because I couldn't.The realization sat heavy in my chest all day, every day.By Friday night, it was unbearable.We were supposed to meet at the diner at eight.Eight o'clock came and went.I checked the diner door for the fifth time.Nothing.The waitress topped off my coffee and gave me a sympathetic smile."Still waiting on someone?""Apparently."I looked down at my phone. No messages. No missed calls.Sylvester was late.Not five-minutes late. Not traffic late.An hour late.That wasn't like him.I called again.Straight to voicemail.A knot formed in my stomach.This case was dangerous. Th
RAINAA week rolled by after touching myself to the thought of Syvelster Brian.We met twice for case work. Once at the bookstore cafe. Once at a diner on the north side that he'd picked because nobody from Castor's circle would be caught dead eating there.Both times he behaved.Both times he was professional. Focused. He went through the intel. Asked the right questions. Took notes. Didn't flirt. Didn't touch me. Didn't mention the texts or any other of the incidents that had happened between us in the previous weeks.Both times the air between us was so charged I could barely sit still.It was in the pauses. The half second where his pen would stop moving and his eyes would lift from the notes and find me and something would pass between us that neither of us acknowledged. Then he'd look back down and keep writing and I'd take a breath and pretend my heart wasn't doing something reckless.By Friday, I'd almost convinced myself that we'd found a rhythm. A steady ground where two adu
RAINAI woke up slowly.For the first time in weeks, my body didn't jolt awake with that familiar knot of dread in my chest. I came to the surface gently. Like rising from deep water. The sheets were cool against my skin. The morning light was soft through the curtains. My limbs felt loose and heavy in a good way.I lay there for a moment, not moving, not thinking.Then the memory of last night came back.The bath. The hot water. My hand between my legs. His name in my head while my body came apart.Heat flooded my face.I pressed my hands over my cheeks and lay there like a teenager who'd just done something she couldn't take back. My skin was warm under my palms. My stomach was doing something fluttery and stupid that I was too old to be feeling.But I felt it anyway.I lay there for another minute. Letting it stew. The embarrassment, the warmth and the strange, reckless excitement that came with both.Then I reached for the burner phone.I pulled it from behind the panel in my clo
RAINAAfter my meeting with Sylvester at the bookstore, I went over to visit my mother at the restaurant.We spent the rest of the afternoon talking about the business, the ongoing campaign and every other small topic. Whenever she tried to ask questions about my marital life, I side-stepped and changed the subject. The sun had set in the sky when I finally made my way home.The house was quiet when I got back.Castor was upstairs. I could hear the faint sound of his study door closing as I came through the kitchen. Maria had retired to the servants quarters in the east wing. The hallway lights were dimmed to their evening setting.I went to my room in the south wing. Closed the door. Locked it.I stood there for a moment in the dark. Just going over my day.~I'll try not to think about you tonight.~The words floated in my mind.His voice was still in my ear. His scent was still on my skin. Despite the time I'd spent with my Mom, the heat in my belly hadn't faded. It had followed me
RAINAThe Next Day.After Syvelster's daring texts last night, I worked up the courage to tell him I wasn't coming to his apartment anymore.He'd suggested the cafe without missing a beat. A small place at the back of an old bookstore on the east side. The kind of place where people came to read, not to be seen. He said he'd been there before. Back table. No foot traffic. No cameras.I told myself this was better. Public. Safe. Professional.I walked in at two o'clock in the afternoon carrying a folder of notes Maria had helped me put together. Names. Dates. Staff rotation schedules not at the mansion alone, even up to the Rowland holdings. Everything organized. Everything in order.Speaking of which, Maria seemed to know a lot about the Rowland family and their enterprise. I guess fourteen years was enough time to really know a family in and out.But what suprised me more was her willingness to help without asking questions as to why I needed this information and what I wanted to use
SYLVESTERThe campaign speech was due tomorrow.I'd been sitting at my desk for four hours. The laptop was open. The cursor was blinking on a half-finished paragraph about infrastructure reform that I'd written and deleted three times.Infrastructure reform.I couldn't even say the words in my head without her face replacing them.She'd stood in the middle of my living room this evening with her arms crossed and her jaw set and told me it couldn't happen again. She'd called it a mistake. Said she wasn't thinking clearly. She'd used the word professional like it was a wall she was building between us, brick by brick, while I watched.I'd let her build it.Then I'd asked her one question and the whole thing came down.Did you like it?The silence that followed was the loudest thing I'd ever heard. She hadn't said no. She hadn't said yes. She'd just stood there with her arms crossed and her eyes full of something she was fighting so hard to keep inside that I could see the effort in her
RAINAFive days later.I saw him from my bedroom window on Tuesday's afternoon.A black SUV pulled up to the side entrance. The kind with tinted windows and no plates I could read from this distance. The driver got out first. Walked around to the back door. Opened it.A boy stepped out.He was smal
RAINAI was still awake when the car pulled away at four in the morning.Restless, I'd changed several positions. Now I was sitting with back against the headboard. Hands in my lap. Eyes open in the dark. The crying from the second floor had stopped around three. The footsteps had stopped shortl
RAINAThe dinner started at eight.I wasn't there for it. Castor had told me that morning that he didn't want me downstairs tonight. I'd opened my mouth to ask why. Buy He'd looked at me with narrowed eyes and whatever was in his eyes had closed my mouth before a single word came out.So I was in
RAINAMaria's story stayed with me like a bruise I couldn't heal.A mother who'd spent fourteen years cleaning a dead man's house because leaving meant giving up the last thread of hope she had.I didn't know what I could do for her yet. But I was going to do something. She wasn't going to spend an







