
Divorce After His Madness
Divorce After His Madness Chapter 1
The flashbulbs outside the Metropolitan Museum of Art were a firing squad, and I was the target. Inside, the air was thick with the scent of lilies and old money, a suffocating perfume that clung to the back of my throat. I adjusted the strap of my silk gown, my fingers trembling—a subtle vibration only a dancer would notice. I needed air. I needed silence.
I slipped away from the cacophony of the gala, finding refuge in a dimly lit VIP lounge draped in velvet and shadow. The relief was short-lived. The heavy oak door clicked shut behind me, the sound echoing like a gavel striking a block.
"Hiding, Amaya?"
Zayne Bradley. The name alone made the fine hairs on my arms stand up. He leaned against the doorframe, loosening his bow tie with a slow, predatory grace. His eyes, usually a sharp, calculating blue, were glazed and dark, swimming in a haze of bourbon and something chemical.
"I'm just taking a break, Zayne," I said, my voice steady despite the sudden erratic rhythm of my heart. "Please, move."
He didn't move. He pushed off the doorframe, the space between us shrinking with every step. "You always run," he slurred, the charm in his voice curdled into something jagged. "Tonight, you don't run."
I backed up until my calves hit the edge of a velvet sofa. "Zayne, you’re drunk. Let me leave."
"I’m not drunk," he whispered, trapping me, his hands slamming into the cushions on either side of my hips. The smell of him—expensive scotch and musk—was overwhelming. "I’m just... focused."
His hand grazed my cheek, a touch that should have been gentle but felt like a claim. I tried to shove him away, but his grip was iron. My body, trained for the grueling discipline of ballet, was useless against his brute, intoxicated weight. The protest died in my throat as his mouth crushed mine, silencing my scream. In the dim light of that lounge, the world tilted on its axis, and the music from the ballroom became a distant, mocking hum.
***
Six weeks later, the morning sun felt like an insult. I sat on the cold tile of my bathroom floor, the porcelain sink digging into my spine. The plastic stick in my hand was light, but it weighed a thousand tons. Two pink lines.
I hadn't told anyone. Not my father, whose laughter still echoed in the hallway downstairs. Not my instructors. I could barely admit it to the face in the mirror.
I gathered myself, shoving the test into the bottom of the trash, and walked into the living room. The air shifted the moment I crossed the threshold. Zayne was there. He sat in my father’s favorite leather armchair, looking entirely too comfortable, a manila folder resting on his knee.
"You look pale, Amaya," he said, his voice smooth, the monster from the gala hidden beneath a veneer of concern.
"What are you doing here? Where is my father?"
"He's at the office. Dealing with a sudden... audit. Nasty business," Zayne mused, tapping the folder. He tossed it onto the coffee table. It slid across the mahogany, stopping inches from my hand. "Open it."
My fingers felt numb as I flipped the cover. Medical records. My medical records. Dated this morning.
"HIPAA violations are expensive, Zayne," I whispered, the bile rising in my throat.
"So is bankruptcy," he countered, his eyes locking onto mine. "You’re carrying my heir, Amaya. A Bradley."
"I'm getting rid of it."
Zayne stood up, the motion fluid and threatening. "You do, and Ross Industries burns by morning. I own your father’s debt. I own his suppliers. I can leave him destitute and disgraced before lunch."
I stared at him, seeing the trap snap shut. He didn't want a wife; he wanted an acquisition.
"Marry me," he commanded, not a question but a verdict. "Save your father. Keep the baby. Or watch everything you love turn to ash."
***
The wedding was a spectacle of white roses and lies. I moved through the ceremony like a doll on a music box, my smile painted on, my movements choreographed. The public saw a fairy tale; I saw the bars of a cage descending.
That night, the Bradley penthouse loomed over Manhattan, a fortress of glass and steel. The city lights below looked like distant embers. I stood by the window, still in my wedding dress, the lace itching against my skin.
Zayne entered the room, the silence heavy between us. He walked to my purse on the vanity, reached in, and pulled out my passport.
"What are you doing?" I asked, my voice barely a whisper.
He slipped the navy booklet into his jacket pocket. Then he picked up my phone. "Installing a new security protocol. For your safety, of course. GPS, call logs, messages... I need to know you’re safe."
He walked over to me, turning me away from the window to face him. His hands settled on my shoulders, heavy and possessive.
"You’re my wife now, Amaya," he said, his thumb tracing the line of my jaw. "You don't need to go anywhere else. You’re home."
I looked into his eyes and saw the truth. I wasn't a partner. I was a possession, a bird with clipped wings, locked in a gilded cage high above the world.
Divorce After His Madness of Contents
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