
Divorce After His Cruel Betrayal
Chapter 3
I was curled on the window seat in the library—the one room Isabella hadn't yet claimed—when the elevator chimed. My body tensed instinctively, muscles remembering the punishment they'd endured in the greenhouse. Three days had passed since my confrontation with Nathan over the divorce papers, and the mansion had become a minefield of hostile encounters and calculated humiliations.
The click of stiletto heels on marble announced Isabella's arrival before I saw her. I considered fleeing, but exhaustion anchored me in place. My lungs still burned with each breath, a constant reminder of Nathan's cruelty.
"Elara! There you are." Isabella's voice dripped with manufactured concern as she appeared in the doorway, dressed in a cream cashmere sweater that probably cost more than most people's monthly rent. "I've been so worried about you."
I didn't bother responding. We both knew the game she was playing.
"Nathan told me about your... episode this morning." She moved into the room with practiced grace, setting down a small shopping bag before perching on the edge of an armchair. "Divorce papers? Really, darling, what were you thinking?"
"That I don't want to be murdered in my sleep," I replied flatly.
She laughed as though I'd told a charming joke. "Always so dramatic. Nathan would never hurt you."
The bandages still covering my arms told a different story.
"I brought you something," she continued, reaching into her bag. "A little peace offering."
I watched warily as she withdrew a framed photograph. With deliberate slowness, she walked to the bookshelf and removed a silver-framed picture of Nathan and me from our anniversary trip to Santorini. In its place, she positioned a photo of herself with Nathan at some gala, his arm wrapped possessively around her waist.
"Much better, don't you think?" she asked, stepping back to admire her handiwork.
As she moved around the room, I noticed the shopping bag contained more frames. One by one, she replaced my memories with hers—photos of Nathan kissing her cheek, laughing together at a yacht party, standing before a Christmas tree I recognized from our own living room last December.
"What are you doing?" I finally asked, though I understood perfectly well.
"Just updating things." She smiled, her eyes cold. "This penthouse needed a woman's touch—a real woman. Someone who can give Nathan what he needs."
She paused at a particularly cherished photo of Nathan and me in Paris and replaced it with one of herself in what appeared to be my favorite dress.
"You know he never loved you," she said conversationally, as though discussing the weather. "You were convenient when his family pressured him to settle down. But he's always been mine."
I watched her methodically erase me from my own home, feeling strangely detached. It should have hurt more, but something inside me had gone numb.
"The charity gala is in three days," she continued, adjusting another frame. "Nathan's told the staff you'll be helping serve. I've selected a uniform for you—nothing too humiliating, just something to make your position clear to everyone."
When she finally left, taking with her the discarded photos of my life, I remained frozen in place. The library, once my sanctuary, now felt like another battlefield where I'd been defeated.
My phone vibrated in my pocket—a lifeline I'd almost forgotten existed. With trembling fingers, I pulled it out to find a message from Claire, my oldest friend from before Nathan. The friend he'd systematically cut from my life years ago.
*Elara, I've been trying to reach you for weeks. Please call me. I'm worried.*
Something cracked in my chest—not breaking further, but perhaps beginning to heal. With a quick glance toward the door, I dialed her number.
"Claire," I whispered when she answered, my voice catching. "I need help."
Thirty minutes later, I had the name of a private investigator who specialized in high-profile divorce cases and wouldn't be intimidated by Nathan's wealth or connections. For the first time in years, I felt the faintest flicker of hope.
What I didn't know then was that Isabella had already set in motion a plan that would make the greenhouse incident seem merciful by comparison. And that the evidence I would soon uncover would forever change how I saw my sacrifice for the man who had become my tormentor.
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