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Dancer Reclaims Her Life Novel Cover

Dancer Reclaims Her Life

The penthouse was silent except for the distant hum of Manhattan traffic fifty floors below. I sat alone in my wheelchair by the floor-to-ceiling windows, watching the city lights flicker to life as dusk settled over the skyline. This view had once made me feel like I was floating above the world. Now it only reminded me how trapped I was—in this gilded cage, in this broken body, in this hollow marriage. Marcus was home early tonight, secluded in his study with the door slightly ajar. His voice drifted down the hallway, unusually animated. I hadn't heard him laugh like that in months, at least not around me. "You should have seen her face when I got home late last night," he said, his voice carrying that smooth, cruel edge I'd grown to recognize. "Sitting there in that chair, looking like some tragic painting. As if that's going to make me want to stay home." My fingers froze on the armrest of my wheelchair where I'd been unconsciously tracing the steps of an old ballet routine.
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Chapter 1

The penthouse was silent except for the distant hum of Manhattan traffic fifty floors below. I sat alone in my wheelchair by the floor-to-ceiling windows, watching the city lights flicker to life as dusk settled over the skyline. This view had once made me feel like I was floating above the world. Now it only reminded me how trapped I was—in this gilded cage, in this broken body, in this hollow marriage.

Marcus was home early tonight, secluded in his study with the door slightly ajar. His voice drifted down the hallway, unusually animated. I hadn't heard him laugh like that in months, at least not around me.

"You should have seen her face when I got home late last night," he said, his voice carrying that smooth, cruel edge I'd grown to recognize. "Sitting there in that chair, looking like some tragic painting. As if that's going to make me want to stay home."

My fingers froze on the armrest of my wheelchair where I'd been unconsciously tracing the steps of an old ballet routine. A habit I couldn't break, even three years after the accident that took my parents and my career.

"Why would I want to spend my nights with a woman who can't even stand up to greet me?" Marcus continued, his voice dropping to that seductive tone he once used with me. "Not when I have you, baby. The way you moved last night... that little spin you did before straddling me... Christ, it reminded me what it's like to be with a real woman."

Each word sliced through me, sharper than the surgical scars hidden beneath my dress. I'd known about his affairs—the late nights, the perfume that wasn't mine, the way his eyes slid past me at parties. But hearing him speak so callously about my disability, mocking the very thing that had once defined me...

I wheeled myself closer to his study, my heart hammering against my ribs. The sensation in my legs had been returning gradually over the past few months—pins and needles at first, then dull aches, now sometimes even the ghost of movement. A miracle I'd kept secret, cherishing each new flicker of feeling like a precious jewel.

"A dancer," Marcus was saying, his voice thick with satisfaction. "The irony isn't lost on me. Isabella used to be one, you know. Before the accident. Now she just sits there, watching me with those sad eyes, as if I'm supposed to spend my life playing nurse to half a woman."

Laughter from the other end of the line. Marcus joined in, the sound like broken glass in my ears.

"Don't worry, baby. I'll be free soon. Just need to handle a few things with the company first. Can't have her family's shares walking out the door with her."

I backed away from the door, my hands trembling on the wheels. Something cold and hard crystallized in my chest where pain had lived for so long. I waited until his call ended and his footsteps retreated toward the master bathroom before I slipped into his study.

The room smelled of his cologne—sandalwood and something sharper, more chemical. His laptop sat open on the mahogany desk. I hesitated only a moment before tapping the keyboard to wake the screen.

His email was open. And there they were—dozens of messages between Marcus and someone named Chloe. I clicked on one with attachments and felt the air leave my lungs.

Photos. Intimate ones. Marcus with a young woman—lithe, beautiful, her body curved into a perfect arabesque in one shot, straddling him in another. A dancer. Of course it would be a dancer.

I closed the laptop and wheeled myself back to the living room, my mind strangely calm despite the storm raging inside me. I positioned myself near the entryway, waiting.

At eight o'clock precisely, Marcus emerged from our bedroom in a tailored suit, his phone to his ear. He barely glanced at me as he strode to the door. It opened before he reached it.

She was there—Chloe—in a red dress that clung to her dancer's body, her smile faltering slightly when she saw me.

"Isabella," Marcus said, his voice instantly shifting to that public tone of practiced concern. "I didn't realize you'd be up. I have a business dinner—"

"With your mistress?" My voice was steady, surprising even me.

His face hardened, all pretense dropping away. "Don't start, Isabella."

"I'm not starting anything," I said, wheeling forward slightly. "I'm ending it. This apartment is in my name—my grandmother made sure of that before she let me marry you. I'll be staying here. You can find somewhere else to live."

Chloe's perfectly glossed mouth fell open. Marcus's face flushed dark with anger.

"You're nothing without me," he hissed. "A crippled, pathetic—"

"Goodbye, Marcus." I turned my wheelchair around, heading toward the bedroom. "Lock the door on your way out."

Behind me, I heard his sharp intake of breath, the beginning of what would surely be a tirade. But for the first time in three years, I didn't flinch at the sound. Instead, I felt something new spreading through me—something that, like the sensation returning to my legs, I had almost forgotten.

Power.

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