
After My Abuser Planned Our Death Together
Chapter 5
The heavy hemp ropes fell away from my bruised wrists, severed by the clean, precise slice of Austin’s pocketknife. His hands were warm, anchoring me to the present, but the chaotic symphony of the warehouse breach was far from over. Tactical boots pounded the cracked concrete. Detective Chen’s voice barked orders through the settling dust.
Then came the agonizing shriek of tearing iron.
Directly above us, the rusted catwalk—destabilized by the explosive breach at the loading doors—gave way. A massive, jagged steel beam snapped from its moorings, plummeting straight toward the chair where I was still untangling my numb legs.
Austin lunged to pull me clear, but a blur of dark fabric and the suffocating stench of sulfur violently intercepted us.
Joel didn't use magic. He used the brutal, undeniable physics of flesh and bone. He threw himself bodily over me just as the iron beam slammed into his shoulder. The sickening, wet crunch of his clavicle shattering echoed beneath the high, vaulted ceiling.
Joel collapsed onto the concrete, gasping, as a spray of hot, crimson blood splattered across the toe of my boot. He clutched his ruined shoulder, his face completely drained of color. Through the curtain of his sweat-drenched hair, he looked up at me. His eyes were wide, brimming with a calculated, desperate agony.
"Aria..." he choked out, his voice a wet, ragged wheeze. "I protected you... I bled for you."
He wanted me to scream. He wanted me to fall to my knees and press my hands to his wound, to let his manufactured martyrdom wash away two hundred years of betrayal.
I just stared at the blood on my boot. It was only red. There was no divine gold in it, no cosmic weight. It was just the pathetic, desperate currency of a narcissist realizing his magic had failed. I didn't reach for him. I let Austin’s steady hand guide me backward, away from the wreckage, leaving Joel to choke on his own calculated sacrifice.
Twelve hours later, the sterile, bleached-white walls of the city’s private trauma ward offered a sharp contrast to the damp rot of the warehouse.
The rhythmic, monotonous beep of the heart monitor was the only sound in the room until Joel shifted against his pillows. His shoulder was heavily bandaged, his arm immobilized in a rigid sling. He looked pathetic, stripped of his supernatural bravado, but the manipulative gleam in his eyes remained entirely intact.
"You came," he whispered, attempting a weak, tragic smile.
I stood at the foot of his bed, my posture perfectly rigid. I didn't cross my arms. I didn't offer him the satisfaction of a defensive stance.
"I took the blow, Aria," Joel pressed, his voice dripping with a sickeningly sweet, guilt-tripping cadence. "I could have let it crush you, but I offered my own body. Doesn't that prove my soul is still bound to yours? I bled to keep you safe. You have to forgive me now."
My thumb instinctively found the raised white scar on my wrist, tracing the jagged edge of my purgatorial trauma.
"A fractured collarbone is a paper cut, Joel," I said, my voice a quiet, lethal scalpel. "It doesn't unmake two centuries of you skinning my soul in the dark. It doesn't erase the three lifetimes you spent basking in the sun with Selene while I rotted. A minor flesh wound does not buy my forgiveness."
The false sweetness vanished from his face, replaced by a twitching, white-hot fury.
"We are done," I stated, the words carrying the absolute, unyielding weight of a judge's gavel. "Do not ever look for me again."
I stepped aside as the heavy oak door swung open. Two men in immaculate, charcoal-gray suits stepped into the room—the Watkins family attorneys, dispatched by my father. They moved with the cold efficiency of executioners, placing a thick, leather-bound folio onto Joel’s tray table.
"Ten million dollars," the lead attorney stated, his tone devoid of any emotion. "In exchange for your signature on this legally binding severance agreement. You will take the funds, you will leave this city, and you will never initiate contact with Aria Watkins again."
Joel stared at the dossier. For a fleeting second, his jaw trembled. He let his shoulders slump, his head dropping in a masterclass of defeated surrender. With his trembling, uninjured hand, he picked up the pen and signed the thick stack of papers.
But I saw the micro-expression. The slight, venomous tightening of his lips. He wasn't surrendering.
That night, the storm finally broke over the Watkins estate. I sat in the parlor, the ambient warmth of the fireplace fighting the chill of the rain lashing against the windows. Austin sat across from me, quietly turning the pages of a leather-bound book, his presence an immovable, grounding mountain.
The heavy mahogany doors burst open. Marcus strode in, his face a mask of grim, controlled fury. He tossed a glowing tablet onto the coffee table between us.
"The severance wire transfer cleared an hour ago," Marcus growled, loosening his tie. "But they didn't take the money and run. They used it as a Trojan horse."
I leaned forward, my eyes scanning the cascading lines of red code on the screen.
"Joel and Selene didn't just want the ten million," Marcus explained, his knuckles turning white as he braced his hands on the table. "They captured the routing architecture from the escrow account. They're using the digital footprint to grant black-market hackers backdoor access to the Watkins' central trust. It's a massive, coordinated cyber-siege. They are trying to siphon every asset we have."
The endgame crystallized in my mind with terrifying clarity. Joel knew he couldn't break my spirit with dark magic anymore, so he and Selene were pivoting to mortal ruin. They believed that if they burned down my fortress—if they bankrupted the Watkins family and stripped away the wealth and security that shielded me—I would be reduced to the helpless, starving girl I was in purgatory. They thought if I had nothing left, I would have to crawl back to him for survival.
I looked up from the tablet, meeting Austin’s dark, steady gaze. He didn't look panicked. He just looked ready.
A cold, sharp smile touched the corners of my mouth. Joel wanted a war of attrition. Let him try.
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