
Forgiven but Choosing Self
Chapter 1
The phone rang at exactly three in the afternoon, its shrill tone cutting through the silence of my small apartment like a blade. I recognized the number immediately—Secretary Wilson, Jameson's ever-efficient shadow. My fingers trembled as I answered.
"Miss Warren, Mr. Hoffman requires your presence at the mansion immediately." Wilson's voice carried its usual cold professionalism, each word precisely measured. "A car will arrive in fifteen minutes."
The line went dead before I could respond. I stared at the phone, my heart already sinking. In three years, Jameson had never summoned me with such urgency during daylight hours. Our arrangement had clear boundaries—I existed in the shadows of his life, available when darkness fell, invisible when the sun rose.
The ride to the mansion passed in a blur of dread. My fingers unconsciously touched the diamond collar around my neck, Jameson's gift that felt more like a leash with each passing day. The driver said nothing, his eyes avoiding mine in the rearview mirror as if I were something shameful to acknowledge.
When I entered the mansion's grand foyer, the sight that greeted me stopped me cold. There, draped across Jameson's Italian leather sofa like a Renaissance painting, was a woman I'd only seen in hidden photographs—Cora Schmidt. Her porcelain skin seemed to glow in the afternoon light streaming through the floor-to-ceiling windows, her dark hair cascading over Jameson's shoulder as she nestled against him.
"Lillian." Jameson's voice held no warmth, just the same detached tone he used with his business associates. He didn't rise from the sofa, didn't even fully turn to look at me. "Come in."
I forced my feet forward, each step feeling like walking through quicksand. Cora's eyes—brilliant green like emeralds—tracked my movement with the satisfied gaze of a cat watching a trapped mouse. She shifted slightly, pressing closer to Jameson, her delicate fingers tracing patterns on his chest.
"James was just telling me about you," Cora said, her voice like honey laced with poison. She tilted her head, studying me with theatrical sympathy. "How generous of him to provide such... comprehensive care for his employees."
Employee. The word stung more than any slap could have.
"Cora has returned from Europe," Jameson announced, his gray eyes finally meeting mine with clinical detachment. "Her husband recently passed away. A tragic situation—he was abusive, left her with nothing."
Cora's lower lip trembled on cue, and she buried her face against Jameson's neck. "If it weren't for James, I don't know what I would have done. He's always been my safe harbor."
I stood there, frozen, watching the woman who'd haunted my entire relationship with Jameson claim her throne. Every night he'd called her name in his sleep. Every time he'd looked through me instead of at me. Every cold morning after—it all led to this moment.
"Your services are no longer required." Jameson reached into his jacket pocket, pulling out a check that he tossed onto the coffee table. It landed with a soft whisper that seemed to echo in the vast room. "That should more than cover our arrangement. Three years of service, generously compensated."
Service. As if I'd been nothing more than hired help.
"Some substitutes forget their temporary nature," Cora observed sweetly, her eyes glittering with triumph. "It must be difficult, living in someone else's shadow for so long. You start to believe you belong in the light."
My throat constricted, words dying before they could form. What could I say? That I loved him? That these three years meant something beyond the money? The truth would only amuse them more.
I moved toward the stairs, needing to gather my things, to salvage some dignity from this humiliation. But Jameson's voice stopped me cold.
"Where do you think you're going?"
"My things—"
"Everything in this house belongs to me." He stood then, moving with the predatory grace I'd once found irresistible. His fingers went to my throat, not in a caress but with businesslike efficiency as he unclasped the diamond necklace. "Including this."
The necklace—my collar, my chain—slipped from my neck with a soft clink. He tossed it carelessly onto a side table, and I watched Cora's delicate fingers immediately reach for it, her eyes bright with acquisition.
"You may leave now," Jameson said, already turning back to Cora. "In what you came with."
I looked down at my simple dress, the only thing I'd owned before him. Everything else—the designer clothes, the jewelry, the pretense of being wanted—belonged to this house, to him, to the ghost of Cora that had always stood between us.
I walked to the door on legs that felt disconnected from my body, each step an act of will. Behind me, I heard Cora's delighted laugh, the sound of champagne being poured, of a celebration beginning.
The afternoon sun felt strange on my face as I stepped outside, a free woman with nothing but the dress on my back and a check I'd never cash. Three years, reduced to a single dismissal. Three years of loving a man who'd only ever seen someone else when he looked at me.
I didn't look back.
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