
Dancer Reclaims Her Life
Chapter 3
"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.
Nathan straightened slowly, wiping his hands on a rag tucked into his back pocket. His eyes—so similar to Marcus's in color yet so different in expression—narrowed as he fully registered my presence. The warmth I remembered from years ago had hardened into something guarded and cold.
"Why are you here?" he asked, his voice low and rough. "Did Marcus send you?"
The mention of his brother's name made something crack inside me. All the composure I'd maintained during my escape—on the subway, wheeling myself through unfamiliar streets—suddenly shattered.
"No," I whispered, my voice breaking. "I left him."
Nathan's expression didn't change, but his knuckles whitened around the wrench he still held. "Left him," he repeated flatly. "After you chose him. After you sided with him when he took everything from me."
The old wound—the family business dispute I'd unknowingly been dragged into years ago. I'd been naive then, believing Marcus's version of events, not understanding the depth of betrayal Nathan had suffered.
"I didn't know," I said, the words inadequate even to my own ears. "I didn't understand what was happening."
A tear slipped down my cheek, then another. I hated crying in front of him, hated appearing weak, but I couldn't stop. "He's been cheating on me," I said, the words tumbling out now. "With a dancer. I heard him on the phone last night, mocking me, calling me half a woman because I can't—because I can't—"
My voice broke completely then, and I covered my face with my hands.
The silence stretched between us, broken only by the distant sounds of traffic and my own ragged breathing. Then I heard the clatter of the wrench being set down, followed by footsteps approaching.
"My brother always was a special kind of bastard," Nathan said, his voice closer now, the edge of coldness softening slightly.
I lowered my hands to find him crouched before my wheelchair, his eyes level with mine. The anger was still there, but now mixed with something else—concern, perhaps even a flicker of the old tenderness.
"He was laughing about it," I continued, needing him to understand the depth of Marcus's cruelty. "Telling her how she could dance for him, move for him in ways I never could anymore. Saying I was just...watching him with sad eyes, as if he's supposed to spend his life playing nurse to half a woman."
Nathan's jaw tightened, a muscle jumping beneath the stubble on his cheek. "He said that to you?"
"Not to me. About me. He didn't know I was listening." I wiped at my tears with the back of my hand. "I confronted him later when his mistress came to the door. Told him to leave. The apartment's in my name—my grandmother made sure of that before the wedding."
A ghost of a smile touched Nathan's lips. "Smart woman, your grandmother."
"She thought she was protecting me by arranging our marriage," I said bitterly. "She never knew what he was really like."
Nathan stood abruptly, running a hand through his dark hair. The resemblance to Marcus was there in his features, but where Marcus was all polished surfaces and sharp edges, Nathan was solid, grounded, real.
"Come on," he said after a moment, his voice gruff. "I've got a room upstairs. It's not much, but it's clean."
He moved behind my wheelchair without asking, a courtesy Marcus had never shown, and began pushing me toward a side door.
"You're letting me stay?" I asked, unable to keep the surprise from my voice.
"Until you figure out your next step," he clarified, not looking at me as he maneuvered my chair through the doorway and toward a freight elevator at the back of the garage. "I'm not turning you out on the street, Isabella, whatever happened between us in the past."
The elevator doors closed, sealing us in the small space together. As we began to rise, I felt something else stirring inside me alongside the grief and fear—the faintest glimmer of hope, like the first sensation returning to my legs after years of numbness.
I just prayed that, like those fragile nerve endings, this newfound hope wouldn't prove to be a cruel illusion.
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