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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 2

I didn't sleep after Marcus left. Instead, I sat by the window, watching the city lights blur through my tears until they dried up completely. By three in the morning, a strange calm had settled over me, as if I'd stepped outside my body and was watching myself from a distance.

I wheeled myself to the closet, pulling out the smallest suitcase I owned. What does one pack when leaving a life behind? I selected practical items—jeans I rarely wore anymore, simple tops, underwear. My fingers hesitated over a worn photo of my parents, tucked away in my drawer beneath silk scarves Marcus had bought to "brighten up my dreary appearance." I slipped it into my bag.

The penthouse was eerily quiet as I moved through it one last time. Three years of memories, none of them warm. I paused at Marcus's desk, scribbling a note with steady hands:

*I know everything. Don't try to find me.*

Simple. Direct. The way I should have been years ago.

I left my wedding ring beside it.

The elevator ride down felt like descending from a prison tower. The night doorman looked surprised to see me alone at such an hour but helped me into a taxi without question. "Grand Central," I told the driver, my voice stronger than it had been in months.

The station was beginning to stir with early commuters when I arrived. I positioned myself near a pillar, away from the main flow of traffic, and pulled out my phone. My grandmother's number was the first contact—the woman who had arranged my marriage to Marcus out of desperate love and fear for my future.

"She doesn't deserve this," I whispered to myself, my thumb hovering over her name. The thought of her face crumpling with guilt and worry made my chest tighten. I deleted the contact with a quick swipe. This was my burden to carry.

Instead, I pulled up a map and plotted my route to Queens. The subway would be a challenge with my wheelchair, but I'd navigated worse. The accident had taken my legs, but it hadn't taken my determination—something I was only now rediscovering.

The subway car lurched and swayed, each stop bringing me further from the gilded cage of my marriage and closer to... what? I had no plan beyond this moment, beyond finding the one person who had looked at me with genuine kindness before my world shattered.

Queens greeted me with morning sunlight that felt different from Manhattan's—warmer somehow, less filtered through glass and steel. I followed the directions on my phone, pushing my wheelchair along uneven sidewalks, my arms burning with effort. The sensation in my legs had intensified with the exertion—not quite pain, not quite feeling, but something in between. A reminder that I was still alive, still changing, still capable of healing.

Sterling Auto Repair appeared at the end of the block, a modest brick building with large garage doors, one rolled up to reveal a workspace inside. My heart hammered against my ribs as I approached. What if he turned me away? What if he still resented me for siding with Marcus in that family dispute years ago—a choice I'd made in ignorance, before I understood the Sterling brothers' toxic dynamic?

I paused outside, watching through the open door. And there he was—Nathan Sterling, bent over the engine of an old Chevy, his broad shoulders tense with concentration. So different from his polished younger brother, with his work-roughened hands and the smudge of grease across his forearm. I remembered him from family gatherings years ago, always standing slightly apart, his quiet dignity a stark contrast to Marcus's performative charm.

I took a deep breath and wheeled myself forward, crossing the threshold into his world. The sound of my wheels on the concrete floor made him look up.

His eyes widened in shock, the wrench in his hand freezing mid-turn.

"Isabella?" My name on his lips sounded like a question, a prayer, and a warning all at once.

I opened my mouth, but the words wouldn't come. After everything—the betrayal, the escape, the journey here—I found myself speechless before the man who might be my last hope.

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