
Breaking Free from His Grip
Chapter 3
The morning light filtering through my new guest room window felt different—thinner, weaker, like everything else in my life. I sat at the small desk, staring at the stack of medical bills that had arrived with yesterday's mail. Zayden's hospital costs were mounting, each page a reminder of how completely I'd lost control.
I needed to ask Royce for money again.
The walk to his study felt like a funeral march. My hand trembled as I knocked, the sound echoing in the hallway that had once felt like home. Now it felt like a mausoleum—beautiful, cold, and filled with the ghosts of what I used to be.
"Come in."
Royce sat behind his mahogany desk, expensive fountain pen moving across documents with practiced efficiency. He didn't look up when I entered, didn't acknowledge my presence until I cleared my throat.
"The hospital bills," I began, hating how small my voice sounded. "Zayden's ventilator costs—"
"How much?" His tone was clipped, businesslike, as if I were a servant requesting household funds.
"Twelve thousand. For this month."
His pen stilled. Finally, he raised his eyes to mine, and I saw nothing there—no warmth, no recognition of our shared history. Just cold calculation.
"You've been spending recklessly," he said. "The florist bill alone was eight hundred dollars last week. Trying to sabotage Elliana's recovery with your jealous spending?"
The accusation hit like a physical blow. "Those flowers were for the dinner party you requested. I have the receipts—"
"I don't care about receipts. I care about fiscal responsibility."
He returned to his paperwork, dismissing me like hired help. I stood there, watching him sign documents worth more than my brother's life, feeling my dignity crumble with each passing second.
The door burst open, and Elliana swept in wearing a silk robe that probably cost more than Zayden's monthly care. Her laughter filled the room like wind chimes, light and careless.
"Royce, darling, I saw the most divine bracelet at Tiffany's yesterday." She perched on the edge of his desk, her fingers trailing along his arm. "Diamonds and sapphires, absolutely perfect for the charity gala next month."
His entire demeanor transformed. The cold businessman melted away, replaced by a man utterly devoted to the woman before him.
"Of course," he said, reaching for his checkbook without hesitation. "Whatever you want."
I watched him write a check for twenty-five thousand dollars—more than twice what I needed for my brother's life support—and hand it to her with a smile that used to be mine.
"You're too generous," Elliana cooed, then seemed to notice me for the first time. "Oh, Scout! I didn't see you there. How are you feeling, dear?"
The false concern in her voice made my stomach turn. "Fine, thank you."
"Still here?" Royce's attention returned to me, irritation flickering across his features. "I'll consider your request and let you know."
Consider my request. For my brother's life.
I left without another word, my footsteps echoing in the empty hallway. Behind me, I heard Elliana's delighted laughter and Royce's indulgent chuckle, the sounds following me like mockery.
That afternoon, Mrs. Adams summoned me to the library. I found her there with Grandfather Adams, his imposing figure casting shadows across the Persian rug. The old man's eyes were sharp as flint, assessing me like livestock at auction.
"Sit," he commanded.
I remained standing. Some small rebellion still lived in me, apparently.
His mouth twitched—not quite a smile, but close. "This situation has become... distasteful. Elliana is carrying the heir we've waited for, and your continued presence complicates matters."
"I'm still Royce's wife."
"A technicality we can remedy." He slid a document across the coffee table. "A settlement. Generous, considering the circumstances."
I glanced at the figure. Fifty thousand dollars. Less than Elliana's bracelet.
"In exchange for what?"
"Your signature on divorce papers. An NDA regarding family matters. And your immediate departure from this house and this city."
The room felt airless. "And Zayden?"
Grandfather Adams leaned back in his chair, fingers steepled. "Hospital equipment can be... unreliable. Ventilators fail. Life support systems malfunction." His voice was conversational, discussing my brother's potential murder like the weather. "Of course, such accidents are less likely when patients have... adequate financial backing."
The threat was crystal clear. Sign, or watch my brother die.
Mrs. Adams avoided my eyes, studying her manicured nails as if they held the secrets of the universe. Her silence was complicity, her cowardice as damning as her father-in-law's cruelty.
"I need time to think," I whispered, playing the part they expected—the broken woman, defeated and desperate.
"Twenty-four hours," Grandfather Adams said. "Then we'll assume you've made your choice."
I nodded, letting my shoulders slump in apparent defeat. "I understand."
As I left the library, I caught my reflection in the hallway mirror. The woman staring back looked utterly destroyed—exactly what they needed to see.
But behind my hollow eyes, something crystallized. A plan. A way out that didn't involve their blood money or their threats.
I just needed to survive long enough to execute it.
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