
From Brothel to Redemption
Chapter 1
The cobblestones beneath my knees were cold and unforgiving as I searched desperately through the twilight shadows of the Imperial Dragon Restaurant's back alley. My fingers traced every crack and crevice, seeking the familiar smooth surface of Grant's jade pendant—the protective dragon that Marcus had given him, now lost somewhere in this maze of stone and refuse.
The pendant meant everything to Grant. I could still see his tearstained face when he'd realized it was gone, his small hands clutching at his collar where it should have rested. "Mama, we have to find it," he'd whispered, and I'd promised him we would. Now, as the autumn evening settled around me like a shroud, that promise felt heavier than the expensive silk of the dark blue robe Victoria had made for me—quality fabric that whispered of my new status, yet simple enough not to draw unwanted attention.
My hands trembled as I shifted another loose stone. The alley held the lingering aromas of expensive cuisine from within the restaurant, a stark contrast to my position on the ground. I was so focused on my search that I barely registered the sound of the ornate back door opening behind me.
"Well, well. Louise Herrera. Or should I say, Louise the Disgraced?"
The voice cut through me like a blade, freezing my blood in my veins. I knew that voice—had once loved it, had once trusted it completely. Slowly, I turned my head, and there he stood: Connor Dean, my former husband, draped in expensive scholar's robes of deep crimson with golden embroidery that caught the dying light. His face wore that same expression of calculated cruelty I remembered from our last encounter five years ago.
"I never imagined I'd find my former wife scavenging in alleyways like a common beggar," he continued, his voice dripping with false surprise and genuine contempt.
Beside him stood Emberly Watson—now Emberly Dean—resplendent in layers of peacock blue silk, her fingers heavy with jade and gold rings that glittered as she raised one delicate hand to her throat in mock horror. Her voice was saccharine sweet, but I could hear the venom beneath: "Oh my, Connor, is this truly the woman you once called wife? How tragic she's fallen so far. Though I suppose given her... history... this is precisely where she belongs."
The word 'history' hung in the air like poison. She knew. They both knew what Connor had done to me, and they were savoring this moment like fine wine.
I rose slowly to my feet, my legs unsteady but my spine straight. The shame that had once consumed me threatened to return, but I pushed it down. I was no longer that broken woman they had left behind. "I'm simply looking for something my son lost," I said, my voice carefully controlled despite the storm raging in my chest. "I'll be gone shortly."
I attempted to turn away, to escape this nightmare before it could unfold further, but Connor stepped sideways, blocking my path. His eyes gleamed with the same opportunistic light I'd seen the night he'd sold me. He was emboldened now, seeing me alone and apparently vulnerable.
"Your son?" Emberly's laugh was like breaking glass. "How fascinating. Tell me, Louise, does the child know what his mother used to be? What she was forced to become because of her own failures?"
The cruelty in her words made my chest tighten, but I kept my expression neutral. They wanted to see me break, wanted to watch me crumble as I had five years ago. But I was not that woman anymore. I had Marcus's love, his protection, his family's acceptance. I had Grant's pure devotion and a new life built on truth rather than lies.
Connor adjusted his scholar's robes—a nervous habit I remembered—and his smile grew wider. "Perhaps we should discuss old times, dear Louise. After all, there's so much to catch up on. I've done quite well for myself, as you can see. The Imperial Academy has recognized my scholarly contributions. I'm now on the literature review board."
My stomach turned. Scholarly contributions. If only they knew the truth about his plagiarized success, about Milo Reed's stolen work that had built Connor's entire reputation.
Emberly moved closer, her silk rustling like a serpent's scales. "And I've been such a devoted wife to Connor. Everything you could never be. Everything you failed to be."
The pendant lay forgotten at my feet as old wounds tore open, but beneath the pain, something else stirred—a quiet strength that Marcus had helped me find, a dignity that no amount of humiliation could steal. They thought they had found their prey, but they had no idea who I had become.
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