
Escaping Blackwood's Gilded Cage
Chapter 1
I stood in our bedroom, Manhattan's evening lights casting long shadows across the polished hardwood floor. The wish jar sat on my palm, its glass cool against my skin. Inside, dozens of colorful paper stars Alexander had folded for me over our five years of marriage caught the light, each containing a promise he'd made.
"I promise to always put you first," I read aloud, my voice barely a whisper as I unfolded the blue star. My fingers trembled slightly as I dropped it into the wastebasket beside me.
My other hand instinctively moved to my abdomen. Eight weeks pregnant. A life growing inside me while everything around me crumbled.
I reached for another star—yellow this time. "I promise to grow old with you, watching sunsets from our porch." The paper felt fragile between my fingers, just like the vow it contained. It joined the blue star in the trash.
Tears slid down my cheeks, but I made no sound. The penthouse was silent except for the distant hum of the city below and the soft rustle of paper as I continued my ritual of dismantling what was once sacred.
"I promise to never let a day pass without telling you I love you." A red star. When was the last time Alexander had said those words to me? Two months? Three?
One by one, I emptied the jar of its contents, reading each promise before discarding it. Some made me smile bitterly at their absurdity now. Others pierced my heart anew.
"I promise you'll never doubt my faithfulness." This one—a purple star—I crumpled without gentleness before tossing it away.
The jar was nearly empty now, just like my heart. I'd loved Alexander Blackwood completely, foolishly. The Manhattan socialite who'd fallen for more than just his billions or his striking looks. I'd fallen for the man who folded paper stars and filled them with promises.
When the last star was gone, I placed the empty jar back on the nightstand. It would remain there, hollow and transparent, a perfect symbol of what our marriage had become.
I heard the front door close—Alexander leaving for another day at Blackwood Enterprises. I waited until his footsteps faded before picking up his phone from the charging station. He'd forgotten it, a rare occurrence that felt like fate's intervention.
I shouldn't do this. I'd never been the type to invade his privacy. But the distance between us had grown too vast, his late nights too frequent, his excuses too practiced.
The notification appeared as soon as I unlocked his phone. A message from Maya Rodriguez.
Maya. The college student we'd been sponsoring through the Blackwood Foundation. Sweet, grateful Maya with her scholarship essays and thank-you notes. Maya, whose education we'd funded together in what I'd thought was our shared commitment to giving back.
My finger hovered over the message, my heart pounding against my ribs. Then I tapped it.
"Miss you already ❤️❤️❤️ Last night was amazing. Can't wait to see you again tonight."
The phone nearly slipped from my grasp. The room seemed to tilt around me as pieces clicked into place—the late meetings, the sudden business trips, the growing coldness in our bed.
I set the phone down carefully, as if it might explode. My hands moved to my stomach again, protective of the innocent life unaware of its father's betrayal.
That night, after Alexander called to say he'd be "working late," I moved through our penthouse with quiet purpose. I packed a small bag with essentials, nothing that would be immediately missed. I transferred funds to an account he couldn't access—not enough to alert him, but enough to give me breathing room.
Finally, I called Martin Weiss, my attorney from before our marriage, someone Alexander had never approved of.
"I need divorce papers drawn up," I said when he answered, my voice steadier than I expected. "And I need absolute discretion."
As I hung up, I caught my reflection in the bedroom mirror. The woman staring back at me wasn't the broken, tearful figure from hours ago. Her eyes held something new—determination.
I placed my hand over my belly, making a silent vow to this child that would replace all of Alexander's broken promises.
"I will protect you," I whispered. "Even from your father."
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