
From Fiancé's Betrayal to Freedom
From Fiancé's Betrayal to Freedom Chapter 1
The box felt heavier than it should. I clutched it against my chest as I stood at the corner of 5th and Main, my fingers tracing the worn edges of the cardboard that held everything I owned from my childhood—a baby blanket, a silver rattle, a faded photograph of tiny hands. Twenty-eight years of questions, and finally, finally, I would have answers.
My phone buzzed. "We're here. Blue sedan. Can't wait to meet you, sweetheart."
Sweetheart. The word made my throat tight. I scanned the intersection, heart hammering against my ribs, and spotted them—a couple in their fifties, the woman's hand raised in a tentative wave, her face lighting up with a smile that looked like it might shatter from the weight of too much hope.
I stepped off the curb, raising my own hand to wave back, when the world exploded into metal and glass.
The black SUV came from nowhere, running the red light at a speed that defied physics. It T-boned their sedan with a sound I will carry in my bones forever—the screech of tires, the crunch of collapsing metal, the terrible silence that followed. Then screaming. Mine.
I ran. My legs moved before my brain caught up, the box tumbling from my hands, spilling my childhood across the asphalt. I reached their car as steam hissed from the crushed hood. The woman—my mother—was pinned behind the airbag, blood trickling from her temple. Her eyes found mine, still conscious, still trying to smile.
"Grace?" Her voice was a whisper, crushed like the car around her.
"I'm here." I grabbed her hand through the shattered window, glass cutting into my palm. "I'm here, I'm here."
"You have...your father's eyes." Her fingers tightened weakly around mine. "We looked...so long..."
The man beside her—my father—wasn't moving. Blood soaked through his shirt, too much blood, spreading like spilled wine across the dashboard.
"Don't leave," I begged, even as sirens wailed in the distance. "Please, we just found each other. Don't leave."
But her grip was loosening, her gaze going distant. "Tell them...tell the Martinez family...we knew...the truth..."
Her hand went limp in mine.
Paramedics pulled me back, their voices professional and detached as they pronounced what I already knew. I stood there, numb, watching them cover the bodies with white sheets that turned red at the edges. Someone pressed my box back into my hands. The baby blanket had tire marks across it.
I don't remember getting home. The next three days dissolved into a gray fog of sleeping pills and unanswered questions. The police called it a tragic accident—the SUV driver fled the scene, no witnesses, no leads. Just another hit-and-run in a city too busy to care.
Grayson barely spoke to me. He attended to phone calls in his study, emerged only to tell me I needed to eat, to sleep, to stop crying. His touch felt clinical, obligatory. When I reached for him in the night, desperate for comfort, he pulled away.
"Valentina needs me," he said. "She's having one of her episodes."
Always Valentina.
On the third day, I left grief counseling early. The therapist's platitudes about closure and acceptance rang hollow in my ears. I needed Grayson, needed him to hold me, to tell me I wasn't alone in this suffocating darkness.
The Harrison estate was quiet when I returned, my footsteps silent on the plush carpet runners. I climbed the stairs toward Grayson's study, rehearsing the words—I need you, please see me, please—when I heard his voice through the partially open door.
Cold. Clinical. Satisfied.
I stopped, my hand frozen on the doorframe.
"It's done," Grayson said into his phone. "The parents are gone. The Martinez family will never know she exists now, and Valentina is safe."
My heart stopped beating. The world tilted sideways.
"I did what was necessary," he continued. "The DNA test would have ruined everything. They would have taken Valentina away, questioned her legitimacy, diverted their affection. This way, everyone stays in their proper place."
A pause. Then, almost gentle: "Grace will recover. She always does. She's resilient that way—convenient, really."
My hand flew to my mouth, stifling the sound that wanted to tear from my throat. The carpet beneath my feet felt like it was crumbling, dropping me into an abyss with no bottom.
He didn't just fail to save them. He killed them. The man I loved, the man I was going to marry, orchestrated the murder of my parents to protect another woman's lie.
I backed away from the door, my vision swimming, and somehow made it to our bedroom. I sat on the edge of the bed we shared, staring at my shaking hands, and waited for him to come upstairs.
When he did, hours later, I was ready. The grief had crystallized into something sharp and clear.
"I heard you," I said quietly.
Grayson froze in the doorway, his face unreadable. Then, terrifyingly, he relaxed. No denial, no panic. Just calm acceptance.
"I thought you might have."
He closed the door behind him and leaned against it, studying me like I was a problem to be solved. "Valentina's mental state is fragile, Grace. The Martinez family believes she's their daughter. If they had discovered you, it would have destroyed her. I couldn't allow that."
"You murdered my parents." My voice sounded distant, like it belonged to someone else.
"I made a difficult decision." He crossed to his desk, pouring himself scotch with steady hands. "You're upset, which is understandable, but you're also hysterical. No one would believe you over me. You have no proof, no witnesses."
He picked up my phone from where I'd left it charging and pocketed it.
"For your own good," he said, meeting my eyes with something that might have been pity. "Until you calm down."
I sat there, trapped in a room with a murderer, and realized I'd been sleeping next to a monster all along.
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