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I woke up on Tuesday morning to Elias sliding his hands all over my hips possessively even though he was still asleep.
Like he was checking to make sure I was still there, still his. âStay home today,â he murmured, his lips brushing my ear, sending a chill down my spine. âWork can wait.â
I tried to ignore that uneasy feeling I had about Elias. But that feeling always finds a way to come back to my mind.
Forcing a smile, I carefully twisted myself away from him. âDeadlines, Elias. You know how it is.
He propped himself on one elbow, his freckled chest was bare, his beautiful golden hair was scattered from sleep.
At thirty one, he still looks handsomely tall, tanned skin and with eyes that promise the whole world only if you follow the rules. His rules.
âNo problem,â he said, tracing my collarbone with his thumb. âBut wear the blue dress. The one I picked for you.â
Ugh, here we go again I thought. Rolling my eyes in my mind.
He kissed my forehead softly, it was a seal of ownership. That he owns me. I swallowed the urge to protest down my throat.
When we talk about control wrapped in affection, that was Elias. He is attentive to fault, he is always rearranging my schedule, always vetoing friends who âdidn't fit.â
I try to convince myself that it was love and protection.
After I was shattered and broken by my last relationship, Elias had felt like stability.
After unending therapy sessions, he felt like a rescue. My handsome rescue.
By noon, my stomach was against me. I felt sharp cramps twisting my stomach. With an unending waist pain. My mood became sour. I felt irritated.
My cycle was erratic, just like Elias' moods.
I sat on my desk, the glow of my laptop blurring my eyes as I felt a surge of headache from nowhere.
As a marketing strategist at a medical firm, I had fought hard for this corner office but lately even my work felt foreign to me.
I needed a doctor.
Someone good. Someone discreet.
A search led me to St. Lucia Hospital, a top OB-GYN department, Midtown.
Same-day appointments if you knew how to ask. I booked an appointment with them.
I booked it under my maiden name. No Elias. No questions.
It was just a check-up, I told myself. Nothing more.
Still, I felt the hairs on my skin rise. I felt chill like i was planning a crime
The day dragged on.
Elias texted me: Miss you. Donât forget dinner tomorrow. Important people will be there. Wear the blue dress.
I typed of course, deleted it, then sent okay instead.
I was feeling pains beneath my sleeve. A faint yellow bruise was on my wrist. It was a ghost of last week's argument.
âYou don't listen," he had said, his fingers tight around my arm. He held my wrist firmly leaving me bruised. âI'm trying to protect you.â
The words were still replaying in my head. When night fell he was calm, his anger was replaced by something rougher, hungrier.
He had pulled me close to him, his hot breath fanning my neck, he traced his fingers on the bruise on my wrist like a silent apology.
âI hate when we fight,â he whispered to me, his voice hungry, not for food but for something raw, something that burned.
For a second, the anger between us turned into heat. The kind that made it hard to even remember what we were arguing about.
I wanted to push him away, but my body leaned closer to him instead. I should have said no. I should have seen the red flags waving like big bold banners.
But I stayed. Because for a moment, his touch made the ache go quiet.
When morning came, the bruise was still there, and so was he, watching me like one night could erase everything.
That evening, I stood facing the mirror, wearing a black lace gown that he hadn't chosen. My brunette waves fell loosely on my back.
I pulled my hand in my hair, smiling at my reflection showing off my gap teeth. I looked like a woman harbouring secrets.
The next morning, I lied to Elias. I told him I had an early meeting. A client breakfast.
He nodded, kissing me goodbye. His hands lingered on my ass for sometime. âDon't forget you will wear the blue dress tonight.â
I smiled then said nothing.
The drive to St. Lucia Hospital was short and peaceful. The hospital is magnificent. With glass walls, a beautiful lobby and a conductive environment. It was really a hospital for the rich.
I handed my keys to the valet, straightened my dress, and then walked in. The hospital's antiseptic smell welcomed me as I walked in.
The lobby was clean, the wall was beautified with health guides, pretty posters and soft paintings that tried too hard to make sickness look gentle.
The nurses moved up and down quietly, neatly dressed. A monitor was beeping somewhere down the hall.
I tightened my grip on my purse and walked towards the receptionist.
I gave my name at reception Ms. Wren and waited, pretending I belonged there.
I waited for about twenty minutes.
Thirty maybe.
My thighs were pressed together. I was feeling nervous.
A nurse appeared. âMs. Wren? She called and I nodded.
This way.â she said, leading me through a hallway.
We walked through a quiet corridor with closed doors, muted voices, and a faint scent of disinfectant.
We stopped at Exam Room 4 and the nurse led me in.
The nurse handed me a thin gown. I tied it tight, though it felt like paper against my skin. She took my vitals. My blood pressure was high.
âThe doctor will be in soon,â she said softly before leaving.
The door clicked shut and silence filled the room.
I counted ceiling tiles.
One. Two. Three. FourâŠ
My skin felt itchy. My palm was cold. I rub them to get warm.
I imagined gloved hands. A calm voice asking questions I didnât want to answer.
Why are you really here, Isola?
My breath came shallow. I wasn't feeling at ease.
Footsteps echoed down the hall approaching the room.
A shadow passed beneath the door.
The handle turned. I looked up, distracted by the noise at the door.
And the door opened.
The rain had stopped, but the air still felt heavy, like the sky itself was holding its breath. Alaricâs safe house in the Catskills sat in near-total silence, broken only by the occasional creak of old wood and the distant call of a night bird. We had been here three days, living like ghostsâsleeping in shifts, jumping at every sound, surviving on canned food and the fragile hope that the police would find Elias before he found us.I was curled on the couch with a blanket when the knock came.Three measured raps. Polite. Controlled.Alaric was instantly on his feet, gun in hand, motioning me to stay back. He moved to the window, peering through a crack in the curtain.His entire body went rigid.âItâs Helena,â he said, voice low.My stomach dropped. âDonât open it.âBut he did.The rain had stopped, but the air still felt thick, like the storm hadnât fully passed.The house was too quiet.Alaricâs safe house in the Catskills sat in total silence, except for the occasional creak of ol
The lake house didnât feel safe anymore.It felt exposed. Alaric stood at the kitchen counter, at 5:47 a.m. beside him. A cup of coffee sat untouched, already going cold. His attention was fixed on the photo Elias had sent, the one taken from outside our bedroom window while we slept. His jaw was clenched so tightly that his muscle tickled. The gun lay beside his mug, loaded and ready.âWe canât stay here,â he said quietly. âHeâs too close.â A pause. âAnd heâs not doing this alone.âI wrapped my arms around myself, the oversized sweater of his I wore doing little to chase away the chill. âWho else would help him? Heâs broke. Disgraced.âAlaric turned, eyes dark with something dangerous. âHelena. Or someone connected to her old network. People who owe her favors from the days when she ran half the board. People who donât ask questions if the price is right.âHe opened his laptop on the table. For the next two hours we worked in tense silence. Alaric still had people he could call.
The call came at 3:12 a.m.Marielâs phone rang first. Then mine.The ringing tone woke the whole house up.I was half-asleep on her couch, Alaricâs arm still wrapped around my waist, when it pulled me upright. Mariel stumbled out of her room, hair a mess, still half in a dream as she answered. âHello?âThen her face changed instantly. Just like that.âPut it on speaker,â I said, already sitting up.She did.âMs. Dane, this is Detective Ramirez. Elias Stone has escaped custody. He made bail yesterday afternoon and disappeared sometime after midnight. We believe he is armed and dangerous. Do not leave your apartment. Officers are on their way.âAlaricâs arm tightened around me without thinking, his body going still beside mine.And just like that, the fear weâd been trying to outrun was right back in the room with us.The room tilted.Everything felt suddenly unsteady, like the ground beneath me had shifted.Alaric was already moving out of bed, pulling on his clothes, his expression
The knock came at 2:17 a.m.I was half-asleep on Marielâs couch, the TV playing softly in the background, when three sharp knocks sounded on the door.My heart jumped instantly. Elias was still in custody, but the fear hadnât left me, it never really did.I reached for the baseball bat Mariel kept beside the couch and moved slowly to the door, peering through the peephole.Alaric.He stood in the hallway, coat pulled tight, eyes scanning the corridor like he expected danger to follow him.Relief hit so hard it almost made my knees weak.I unlocked the door quickly and pulled him inside before he could say anything. The moment it shut, he had me against it, his mouth crashing onto mine with months of pent-up hunger. His hands cupped my face, thumbs brushing my cheekbones as if making sure I was real.âYouâre here,â I whispered between kisses, tasting rain and desperation on his lips.âI couldnât stay away any longer,â he said, breathing unevenly.And in that moment, nothing else matt
The morning after Nikoâs testimony, the world felt⊠smaller and strange. Like the walls had shifted in overnight.My phone wouldnât stop buzzing.Calls. Messages. Unknown numbers lighting up the screen one after another. A few names I actually recognized slipped in between, some old colleagues, people I hadnât heard from in months. âJust checking on you.â âIâm so sorry youâre going through this.âBut under their fake pretending concern, they were fishing for details.The headlines weren't left out. Tweets, posts all over the internet.âDoctorâs Secret Affair Exposed â Patient Testifies in Sonâs Assault Trial.ââSt. Lucia Scandal Deepens: Was It Love or Grooming?âI sat on Marielâs couch in the same clothes from yesterday, knees drawn to my chest, staring at the glowing screen.Nikoâs voice kept replaying in my head.The affair wasnât mutual⊠It was manipulation.Mariel walked in with two steaming mugs and that look on her face⊠the one that meant sheâd already decided how this was g
The courtroom felt different today. Not in a good way though. It was filled with thick tension that was enough to make someone feel uneasy.I sat in the front row of the gallery, back straight, my sweaty hands clenched tightly on my laps.Eliasâs trial had dragged into its third week, but today felt different.The air was thicker, heavier, like the moment before a storm breaks. The judges weren't even smiling.It felt like waking up on a monday to resume work. Alaric sat a couple of rows behind me. I didnât have to turn to know he was there⊠I could feel it. His life hadnât gone back to normal. His license was still suspended. His name is still dragged in rumors and headlines. But he was here⊠watching, supporting, refusing to hide.He stayed.Niko Voss took the stand.He looked exactly like he always did, controlled, polished, with an unreadable expression.His navy suit fit him perfectly, his blond hair was in place.If you didnât know better, youâd think he was here to give a l
I woke late, the apartment was quiet except for the hum of Marielâs fridge. The bruise had darkened overnight, its violet and ugly, blooming up my wrist like some sort of ugly tribal mark. I stood in front of her bathroom mirror, the ice long melted, and just stared at my wrist. It didnât look lik
The live feed displayed on my phone, me standing in the kitchen, frozen with my wide eyes staring back at the tiny black lens above the fridge. The words glowing in my phone;Smile, sweetheart. You are on camera.My hand was shaking so badly that even the screen of my phone was blurry in my eyes.T
We walked fast and silently to the park, with Alaric by my side. The fountain sprayed in the sunlight, sharp and cold. Every drop felt like a reminder.âSit,â he said, his voice rough. He pressed a folded handkerchief to my neck, a soft linen.I caught the tiny initials stitched in one corner: A.S.
Elias stood ten feet away, with his phone in his hand and his face unreadable.âTracking app,â he said evenly. âYou turned it off last night. I had to turn it back on.âHis calm scared me more than shouting would have. For a second, I wished the ground would just open up and swallow me whole.The a







