
After My Husband Donated My Mother's Liver To His Mistress
Chapter 2
I stared at the pile of bedsheets on my lap, my fingers working methodically to tie another knot. The silk was cool against my skin—expensive Egyptian cotton that Jonathan had specially imported. How fitting that the luxury he'd surrounded me with would become my means of escape.
Three days had passed since I'd discovered the truth about my mother's surgery. Three days of smiling at Jonathan over breakfast, of accepting his gentle kisses on my forehead, of pretending I was still his docile angel while rage burned inside me like acid.
"Just a few more knots," I whispered to myself, testing the strength of my makeshift rope. The penthouse was silent except for the distant hum of Manhattan traffic thirty floors below. Jonathan was at a late board meeting—one that would keep him occupied for at least two more hours. Mrs. Reynolds, our housekeeper, had left for the day. I was alone, truly alone, for the first time in weeks.
I wheeled myself to the balcony doors and pushed them open, feeling the cool night air rush against my face. The city lights sparkled below, a galaxy of possibilities. Freedom was down there somewhere, if I could just reach it.
With trembling hands, I secured one end of my bedsheet rope to the heavy marble balcony railing. I'd tested it earlier—it could hold three times my weight. The sheets were knotted every few feet to give me handholds. It wasn't elegant, but it would work. It had to work.
I'd been building my upper body strength for years—the one benefit of life in a wheelchair. Jonathan had always praised my "surprisingly strong arms" with that condescending smile of his. He never imagined I'd use that strength to escape him.
My phone buzzed with a text from my father: "We're in position. Southwest corner."
I peered over the edge. Thirty floors down, I could just make out my parents' silhouette near the service entrance of the building. They'd managed to evade Jonathan's surveillance—at least for now.
With a deep breath, I transferred myself from the wheelchair to the balcony floor, then to the outer edge. My heart hammered against my ribs as I gripped the makeshift rope and began to lower myself over the edge.
The first few feet were the hardest. My arms screamed in protest as I dangled in the open air, the wind whipping around me. But then muscle memory took over—all those hours in physical therapy, all those exercises I'd done in secret while Jonathan was away. Hand over hand, I descended into the darkness.
Twenty-five floors to go. Twenty. Fifteen.
My palms burned from the friction of the sheets. The wind grew stronger, swinging me gently from side to side. I refused to look down, focusing instead on the rhythmic movement of my hands. Each pull brought me closer to freedom.
Ten floors. Five.
When my feet finally touched the ground, I almost couldn't believe it. My father rushed forward with my spare wheelchair, helping me into it with practiced ease. My mother stood lookout, her eyes darting nervously around the darkened street.
"We need to move quickly," she whispered. "The car is waiting."
As they pushed me toward the waiting taxi, I pulled out my phone. With a surge of defiant satisfaction, I snapped a picture of the dangling bedsheets against the towering building and sent it to Jonathan with a simple message: "Goodbye, husband."
The taxi sped through the late-night streets toward JFK Airport. My parents had already purchased tickets for a red-eye flight to Seattle—far from Jonathan's reach. My father held my hand tightly as my mother made frantic calls to arrange for medical care upon our arrival.
"He'll come after us," I said quietly. "You know that, right?"
"Let him try," my father replied, his voice harder than I'd ever heard it. "We're not his property."
But as we approached the airport terminal, my phone buzzed with an incoming call. Jonathan. I declined it, but seconds later, a text appeared:
"I see you, angel."
A cold dread washed over me as I looked out the window. A black SUV had pulled alongside our taxi, keeping pace perfectly. Through the tinted windows, I could make out the silhouette of Marcus Thorne, Jonathan's head of security.
"Dad," I whispered, gripping his arm. "They've found us."
Before my father could respond, our taxi screeched to a halt. Three identical black SUVs had formed a blockade across the airport approach road. Men in dark suits emerged, their movements precise and threatening.
The taxi door was wrenched open. Marcus Thorne stood there, his expression impassive as he reached in to grab my arm.
"Mrs. Pierce," he said flatly. "Mr. Pierce requests your immediate return."
My father lunged forward, but another security guard restrained him. "You can't do this!" he shouted. "She's my daughter!"
"Actually, sir, she's Mr. Pierce's wife," Marcus replied coldly. "And you are trespassing on private property."
As they dragged me from the taxi toward the waiting SUV, I caught sight of another vehicle pulling up. The door opened, and Jonathan stepped out, his face illuminated by the airport lights. He wasn't angry. He wasn't even upset.
He was smiling.
"Did you really think it would be that easy, angel?" he asked, his voice carrying across the distance between us. "I own this city. I own you."
As our eyes met, I realized with sickening clarity that my escape attempt had played directly into his hands. This wasn't the end of my imprisonment.
It was just the beginning of his punishment.
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