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Breaking Free from His Trap Novel Cover

Breaking Free from His Trap

The morning sunlight streamed through the conservatory windows, casting golden patterns across my collection of geraniums. I moved methodically among them, touching each leaf with gentle fingers, checking for signs of new growth. This ritual had become my sanctuary over the years—a place where life flourished under my care, unlike the tiny lives that had repeatedly failed to take root inside me. I filled the crystal watering can, feeling its familiar weight in my hands. "Just enough," I whispered to the delicate pink blooms. "Not too much, not too little." The same careful balance I'd been trying to maintain in every aspect of my life for the past seven years of marriage. After tending to my plants, I gathered a bouquet of stargazer lilies, their fragrance heavy and sweet. I arranged them in the antique vase Marcus had given me on our third anniversary, just before our second miscarriage. My fingers trembled slightly as I positioned each stem, creating perfect symmetry—a small piece of order I could control in a world that had repeatedly betrayed my deepest hopes. I checked my watch.
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Chapter 1

The morning sunlight streamed through the conservatory windows, casting golden patterns across my collection of geraniums. I moved methodically among them, touching each leaf with gentle fingers, checking for signs of new growth. This ritual had become my sanctuary over the years—a place where life flourished under my care, unlike the tiny lives that had repeatedly failed to take root inside me.

I filled the crystal watering can, feeling its familiar weight in my hands. "Just enough," I whispered to the delicate pink blooms. "Not too much, not too little." The same careful balance I'd been trying to maintain in every aspect of my life for the past seven years of marriage.

After tending to my plants, I gathered a bouquet of stargazer lilies, their fragrance heavy and sweet. I arranged them in the antique vase Marcus had given me on our third anniversary, just before our second miscarriage. My fingers trembled slightly as I positioned each stem, creating perfect symmetry—a small piece of order I could control in a world that had repeatedly betrayed my deepest hopes.

I checked my watch. Ten minutes until my scheduled call with Dr. Patel. Setting the vase on the dining room table, I retreated to Marcus's home office for privacy. The room smelled of his sandalwood cologne and ambition.

When Dr. Patel's face appeared on screen, her expression was professionally compassionate—a look I'd grown accustomed to over nine failed pregnancies.

"Mrs. Sterling, everything looks promising for tomorrow's embryo transfer. Your hormone levels are optimal, and the endometrial lining is exactly where we want it."

I nodded, swallowing the knot in my throat. "This time feels different somehow, Dr. Patel. I think... I think this might be our miracle."

She smiled, but her eyes held that careful reserve I'd come to recognize—the look of someone who didn't want to crush fragile hope but had seen too many disappointments to encourage it.

"We're doing everything medically possible," she assured me. "Just remember to rest afterward and let your husband take care of you."

"Marcus has been my rock," I said automatically, the words practiced and polished from years of repetition. "I couldn't ask for more support."

After ending the call, I sat motionless, hands folded in my lap. Ten years ago, I'd been Victoria Hayes, poised to join my family's consulting firm after graduating with honors. Now I was Mrs. Sterling, professional fertility patient, whose body had become a battlefield of hormones, procedures, and crushed dreams.

---

That evening, I pulled our wedding album from the bookshelf while waiting for Marcus to return from work. The leather-bound book felt heavy in my hands—weighed down with memories and promises.

"Remember how happy we were?" I whispered to the smiling couple in the photographs. The Victoria in those images looked radiant, untouched by the years of disappointment that would follow.

The sound of Marcus's car pulling into the driveway made me close the album. I hurried to the entryway, eager to share Dr. Patel's optimism about tomorrow's procedure.

The front door opened before I reached it. Marcus rushed in, phone pressed to his ear.

"I'll call you back," he muttered, spotting me. He kissed my cheek distractedly. "Sorry, sweetheart. Crisis at work. I need to grab something from my briefcase and make a few calls."

"Of course," I said, taking his coat. "I spoke with Dr. Patel today—"

"That's great," he interrupted, already heading toward his office. "Tell me over dinner?"

I watched him disappear down the hallway, feeling the familiar ache of being an afterthought. His briefcase sat abandoned by the door. Always the dutiful wife, I picked it up to bring to him.

The weight shifted unexpectedly, causing the flap to fall open. Marcus's phone slipped out, landing face-up on the hardwood floor. The screen illuminated with a muted Zoom call still in progress.

I bent to retrieve it, my finger accidentally tapping the volume button. Suddenly, Amber Collins's voice filled the quiet foyer.

"—nine miscarriages should be enough, Marcus. The Sterling curse should be satisfied by now."

I froze, my blood turning to ice.

Marcus's response came through clearly: "My father says we need to be certain. Victoria's been the perfect vessel for the cure. Once we're sure the curse is broken, we can start our real family."

Amber laughed, the sound like breaking glass in my ears. "She still has no idea those weren't real pregnancies? That we've been using her body to absorb the family curse?"

"None. She believes everything I tell her. Always has."

The phone slipped from my suddenly numb fingers. I caught it before it hit the floor, my mind racing to process what I'd just heard. My entire world tilted on its axis, reality warping around me.

With shaking hands, I noticed a USB port on the side of his phone case. Acting on instinct, I pulled the flash drive from my keychain—the one I used for backing up my gardening journal—and connected it to his phone. I frantically searched for a way to copy the video, finding the recording controls and hitting save.

Hearing Marcus's footsteps approaching, I disconnected the drive, slipped it into my pocket, and placed the phone back in the briefcase exactly as I'd found it.

"Victoria? Did you bring my briefcase?" Marcus called from his office.

I took a deep breath, forcing my face into the mask of devoted wife I'd worn for years. "Coming, darling," I answered, my voice somehow steady despite the hurricane raging inside me.

As I walked toward his office, carrying the briefcase that contained evidence of my shattered life, I felt something new crystallizing within me—something cold and sharp and dangerous.

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