LOGINChapter 7
LINA "Damien Whitmore, CEO of Whitmore Industries, was photographed this afternoon carrying our very own socialite Adora Cavendish into the Pemberton Medical Centre following a reported ankle injury at a private event involving the two of them, we are not yet sure of how the injury came to be, but from the panicked look on Damien's face, we can conclude that it was a grave injury.This is not the first or third time we have seen something involving this couple, after all Whitmore and Cavendish have long been subjects of public fascination given their past history as childhood friends and past lovers before Whitmore arranged marriage to his wife Selina Rodriquez two years ago, following the death of her parents after they saved his life.
Sources close to the pair, reporting from inside say Whitmore stayed with Cavendish for several hours, personally ensuring she was seen by a specialist, that had been flown in from another city and this has ended up raising questions about the current state of his marriage and whether audiences are watching the early chapters of a great love story finally finding its—
I turned the television off, breathing heavily, the words keep playing like a loop in my head. I stood in the silence with the remote still in my hand and looked at the blank screen for a long moment, staring at nothing in particular but my mind was filled with turmoil as I processed the words.
He had stayed. He had carried her. He had sat beside her hospital bed for hours, holding her hand probably, making sure that she knew that he was present and was not leaving, saying all the right kind of things every woman wants to hear at that moment, he was actually being the version of himself that I had spent over two years trying to reach but never succeeding to get.
The war, attentive and caring version, the one who looked at you like you were the only thing worth it.
I had twisted my wrist on the kitchen counter three weeks ago, reaching for something on the top shelf that I couldn't reach but kept trying because the alternative was to ask him for help- and I did not want to bother him and he had been home when it happened, and he had glanced up from his phone and said to put ice on it and then returned to his emails. Not sparing me another glance at all.
This sudden fleeting memory that flashed quickly in my head made me grip the remote tightly as I thought about throwing the remote at the blank television screen. I thought about it seriously, thinking about the satisfying crack it would make against the screen.I set the remote down on the coffee table.
He would see it. He would ask what happened. And I would have to stand there and explain myself and he would look at me like I was unhinged and crazy and I would have to watch him come to the conclusion that once again I was the problem and he was such a martyr for trying to manage someone like me.
I pressed my hands together, fingers laced, and squeezed until the knuckle ached from too much force but I didn't let go, the pain cleared all the fog in my head, removing all the love that had blinded me towards him for so long.
Then I made a decision.
I was not going to wait for his talk. I was not going to sit in this house and wait for him to come home and sit me down with that careful expression on his face as he would try to explain my situation to me, like I had not been living in for two years. I was going to leave. Tonight, if I could manage it. Not after I'd planned it perfectly, waiting for him or waiting to talk to his grandmother first. No, I was going to leave right now.I went upstairs and pulled my old travel bag from the top of the closet. It was a worn canvas duffel, one of the few things I'd kept from my life before the Whitmores.
I set it open on the bed and stood in front of it for a moment, trying to decide what a person took when they were running away. I focused on taking the practical things first, my documents.
I found my passport in the drawer of my bedside table and laid it on top of the bag. My old identification card. The small envelope of photographs I kept tucked inside a book I'd brought from my childhood bedroom, photos of my parents and one of myself at ten years old, squinting into a bright sun. I couldn't leave those. I started going through the wardrobe, pulling out pieces that were mine, clothes I'd bought with my own money before Damien PR had brought a stylist that had been working on selecting the clothes that best suited me as a CEO wife and I'd gone along with because I hadn't known how to say no politely. I went for the older things that I owned before my life with Damien.A pair of jeans that fit perfectly. A sweater my mother had chosen on a shopping trip when I was fifteen. A dress I'd bought with my first tutoring paycheck, years ago, that I still loved even though Damien had glanced at it once and said something about it being a bit casual for their social calendar.
I folded them. I placed them in the bag. Then I opened the banking app on my phone.
I had my own account. I'd had it since I was eighteen, a student account that I'd opened myself and maintained through university, and after the wedding I'd stopped paying much attention to it because there had been no income to put into it and no reason to think about it.
The balance loaded and I looked at it.
Negative forty-three dollars and seventeen cents. [-$43.17c]
I stared at the number for long enough that the screen dimmed from inactivity and I had to tap it again to keep it awake.
Negative. Not zero. Not a small number I could work with. Negative. I sat down on the edge of the bed.
Forty-three dollars. Negative forty-three dollars. That was my independence.I looked at the other card in my wallet. The black one. Damien's card, technically, though his grandmother had said it was mine, as his wife and I had the right to use it, but it was in Damien's name and he had the right to see what the card had purchased at his convenience.
I had not touched it for anything personal. Not once. I'd used it for household things, groceries, the occasional household repair when staff flagged something, that was bad and needed attention drawn to it, I had taken care of it, with his card instead of calling him and bothering him with things that were not worth his time.
If I withdrew cash, a significant amount, it would flag immediately. He would know within hours. And he would keep a close tab on me, to see what I was going to do with such large amount of money.
I set my phone face-down on the bed and looked at the half-packed bag.
The plan, to run away was already dissolving.
Chapter 77Damien POVThe screens showed surveillance tapes of areas in the city. The phones are constantly being worked by the operatives. Several cups of coffee are beside the laptops. The eye rubbing and soothing of foreheads were becoming more frequent. I stared around the office and remained seated. I have been moving around the makeshift operations room trying to get first hand report of what the analysts were doing and finding out.However, over the past few hours I had remained motionless. I sat down and waited. Then took the decisions that needed to be taken. I gave orders with so much levity and distance that made the analysts blink a few times. Cain and Marcus noticed it but they never said anything. Marcus went close to a screen, he had a document in his hand. “Most of the leads we have failed. The abandoned warehouses, fake identities and traffic cameras footage have been dead ends. I think I know why.”He had my attention with that statement. I leaned forward as he con
Kayden POVChapter 76The doctor immediately demanded that will sanitized the room. The guards came in and took away the used plates she had breakfast with, the sheets were changed. He ordered everyone out and I moved outside. Selina needed her privacy after all.I leaned on the wall, watching the doctor through the slightly ajar door. He examined her head for signs of concussion. He proceeded to get readings of her vitals. I stared at my wristwatch with a scowl on my face. I was using losing the one commodity I couldn’t afford: time. I hated waiting. It had nothing to do with patience. Waiting meant being uncertain and months of planning had eliminated any uncertainty that was possible. Now, I stood here having to wait for a doctor to determine if my carefully laid out plans would be thrashed because of one guard’s incompetence.She looked pale except the places where her skin were bruised. Her complete attention was on her baby. At least, we agreed on something: the baby’s health
Chapter 75Selina POV My heart pounded as the air ran through my face. So close! My chest burned and my muscles were beginning to ache but I ignored the pain as my breathing came in hard spurts. The exit was so close I could almost taste the alluring scent of freedom. I was going to make it. Come just a few more steps. You can do this! My body was protesting violently. The edge of my vision began to blur. Not now. I thought about my baby; the determination and adrenaline that surged through my body sharpen my vision. I pushed myself forward, this was my only chance.My balance was suddenly upended as a muscular hand with a vice-like grip grabbed my arm. No! I tried to pull my arm out of the grip but it was no use. I gathered all my strength and without thinking, slammed into him. He cursed under his breath as my unexpected move sent him crashing to the floor. I picked up myself, a line of pain shot through my arm and took a few steps. I stretched my hands to touch the gate when
CHAPTER 74SELINA POV — The OpeningI had stopped counting the days and started to measure time by the change in the guards rotation and the time my food was brought to me.Routine kept the panic contained and I was able to able to function.As long as I'm alive, I told myself, there's still a chance.I had also been watching covertly. I'd learned early that obvious observation got me more scrutiny, placed the guards on alert which gave me with less room to work. So I watched in sideways and stolen glances rather than long stares or looks.I knew which guards were disciplined and which weren't. The younger one with the mohawk hair checked his phone every time he thought no one was looking. The muscular guard stepped out for cigarettes at the same interval like clockwork. One of them talked too much to the others, filling silence out of nervous habit, which meant his attention split constantly between conversation and duty.And then there was Sefu.He wouldn’t hold my gaze. Discomfort
CHAPTER 73DAMIEN POV I had spent the better part of a day suspecting the wrong man and it was almost impossible to say that out loud.The operations room had thinned out around us. I had the immigration records open on the screen beside me and a travel history that placed him on another continent for every single date that mattered.He hadn't done any of it. I closed the file and looked at him. "I was wrong about you."I didn't dress it up further than that. Cain didn't strike me as a man who needed cushioning. "The evidence pointed at you. I followed it. I was wrong, and I don't have time to be precious about admitting that."He held my gaze for a moment. "If our positions were reversed," he said, "I'd have done the same thing."Cain was a man who understood more than most, the cutthroat nature of our world. "I need your help," I said."You have investigators," he answered."Investigators are useful for tracing money and reading documents. They don’t understand or the world he ope
CHAPTER 72DEREK POVMy office had stopped looking like an office somewhere around midnight. Now it looked where someone was having a breakdown. Documents covered every flat surface and three laptops open to different windows of the same investigation.Nobody had said much in the last hour. There wasn't energy left for conversation. We'd given up chasing symptoms my lawsuit, Caleb's fraud, the tabloid stories and started digging for whatever sat underneath all of it. So far, every thread circled back to one name. Wren Castillo. So we went began the hunt.Dean had dragged in a whiteboard from somewhere and was building a single timeline. I was halfway through a registry search when Caleb went quiet in a way that made me look up."I never signed this," he said.I crossed the room and read over his shoulder. His name was on a company document I'd never heard him mention. It got worse, he was also listed as director, not investor. He checked the incorporation date twice, like exhaustion
Chapter 44Selina POV I arrived at the office, distracted and completely untethered. I couldn’t even remember the journey to the office, I got to my cubicle and sat down, remaining still for several seconds as I tried to arrange my thoughts.Was I really imagining things? Don’t do that. I’m not cr
Chapter 43Caleb POV I was seated in my office as I stared at the pile of documents in my table. Emails, official correspondence, and financial records were stacked from the past eight month in front of me like soldiers ready for a grim inspection.I sighed, picked up the telephone a
Chapter 42Damien POV I was in the office, seated behind my desk as I stared into space. My laptop screen had some documents opened but my mind was elsewhere. After discovering Amora’s dishonesty, I started to dwell on the shooting incident at the dinner. The police r
CHAPTER 41Selina POV.I forced myself to calm down and act natural as I scanned around. Deep breathes. Inhaling and exhaling several, I was able to get my ragged breathing under control. I started walking, through the glass of the shops and buildings I passed, I noticed the black sedan t







