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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 3

I stood in my garden, staring at the lilies I'd so carefully tended. Once vibrant and proud, they now drooped—their petals curling inward as if trying to protect themselves from an unseen threat. How fitting. I plucked my phone from my pocket, my fingers trembling as I typed a message to my mother: 'The lilies are wilting.'

A code. Something innocuous that Marcus would dismiss if he happened to see it, but my mother would understand. Eleanor Hayes had never trusted my husband. 'There's something empty behind his eyes,' she'd told me once. I'd defended him then, accused her of being unable to see the good man I'd married.

How blind I had been.

I waited until Marcus left for his morning run—the predictable routine of a man who believed himself untouchable—before retrieving the flash drive from its hiding place inside a hollowed-out gardening book. I sealed it in a padded envelope addressed to my mother's business partner, not her directly. Marcus might be monitoring her mail.

Frank Miller arrived exactly when he said he would, parking his nondescript sedan a block away. I met him at the corner coffee shop, sliding into the booth across from him.

'Mrs. Sterling,' he greeted me, his weathered face betraying nothing.

'Did you deliver it?' I asked, wrapping my cold hands around a mug of untouched coffee.

He nodded once. 'Your mother received it personally. No intermediaries.'

'And?'

'She's... processing the information.' His careful choice of words told me everything. My mother was furious, devastated, plotting.

'Tell her I need time,' I whispered. 'I need to gather more evidence.'

'She's arranged for surveillance,' Frank replied, sliding a business card across the table. 'Discreet. Professional. They'll be watching the house, your husband, his friends.'

'Will they be watching me too?'

His eyes softened briefly. 'For your protection, Mrs. Sterling.'

I nodded, tucking the card into my pocket. 'Thank you.'

---

That evening, I moved through my home like an actress on stage, arranging flowers, lighting candles, preparing a meal for the small dinner party we were hosting. My hands performed these tasks automatically while my mind remained detached, observing the performance from a distance.

The doorbell rang at precisely seven. I smoothed my dress and fixed my smile in place before opening the door.

'Victoria!' Amber's voice was honey-sweet as she air-kissed my cheek. 'You look absolutely radiant.'

I wondered if she was thinking about the videos as she smiled at me, if she knew about the 'treatments' they'd subjected me to while I was unconscious. The thought made bile rise in my throat.

'Thank you for coming,' I managed, stepping aside to let her enter. Marcus appeared behind me, his hand settling possessively on the small of my back.

'Amber, so glad you could join us,' he said warmly. I felt his fingers press against my spine—a warning, a reminder of ownership.

'I wouldn't miss it,' she replied, her eyes flicking between us. 'Victoria always creates such a beautiful atmosphere.'

She moved through our living room, trailing her fingers over the furniture, commenting on the décor with practiced admiration. 'These lilies are stunning. You have such a gift.'

I watched Marcus watching her—the subtle nod of approval, the slight curve of his lips. My skin crawled with disgust.

'Dinner will be ready soon,' I said, retreating to the kitchen where I could breathe again.

---

Three days later, I met Frank in the underground parking garage at McCormick Place. The concrete walls amplified every sound—the distant echo of cars, the drip of condensation from pipes overhead.

'You have it?' he asked without preamble.

I handed him Marcus's phone, unlocked and open to the hidden folder. 'I copied everything, but I need the original back before he notices it's missing.'

Frank nodded, connecting the device to his laptop. 'Two hours. I'll have it back to you.'

'Will it be enough?' My voice sounded small in the cavernous space.

'It's a start,' he said, eyes fixed on the screen as files transferred. 'But we'll need more. Corroboration of locations, audio logs. Something that proves beyond doubt what they did to you.'

'And if we can't get that?'

He looked up then, his expression grim. 'Then we make sure they never have the chance to do it again.'

As I turned to leave, a car engine echoed through the garage. I froze, heart pounding. Had Marcus followed me? Had Amber? I pressed myself against a concrete pillar, waiting as headlights swept across the wall.

The game I was playing had deadly stakes. And I was only just learning the rules.

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