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From Hostage to Heroine Novel Cover

From Hostage to Heroine

The conference room felt suffocating despite its expansive glass walls overlooking the city. I sat rigid in my chair, trying to ignore the whispers rippling through the assembled colleagues as Logan stood at the head of the table, his expression carved from stone. "The situation is straightforward," he announced, his voice carrying that clinical detachment I'd learned to recognize over the past months. "The rival faction has Marie and Audrey. They've demanded an exchange—one of ours for both of them." My fingers traced invisible patterns on the polished mahogany, a nervous habit I couldn't shake. Around me, executives shifted uncomfortably. Someone coughed. The air conditioning hummed with mechanical indifference. "Whitney will go," Logan continued, and the room tilted. For a moment, I convinced myself I'd misheard.
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Chapter 1

The conference room felt suffocating despite its expansive glass walls overlooking the city. I sat rigid in my chair, trying to ignore the whispers rippling through the assembled colleagues as Logan stood at the head of the table, his expression carved from stone.

"The situation is straightforward," he announced, his voice carrying that clinical detachment I'd learned to recognize over the past months. "The rival faction has Marie and Audrey. They've demanded an exchange—one of ours for both of them."

My fingers traced invisible patterns on the polished mahogany, a nervous habit I couldn't shake. Around me, executives shifted uncomfortably. Someone coughed. The air conditioning hummed with mechanical indifference.

"Whitney will go," Logan continued, and the room tilted.

For a moment, I convinced myself I'd misheard. That the ringing in my ears had distorted his words into something impossible. But then I saw Rachel Torres's face drain of color across the table, saw Marcus Chen's jaw tighten, and I understood with crystalline clarity that this was real.

"Logan—" I started, my voice emerging smaller than intended.

He didn't look at me. "It's the pragmatic choice. Marie and Audrey's skill sets are critical to the upcoming merger. We can't afford to lose both of them." His gaze swept the room, landing everywhere except on me. "Whitney understands the necessity of strategic sacrifice."

Strategic sacrifice. The words landed like physical blows. I thought of the lucky charm bracelet I'd spent weeks crafting, now gathering dust in his desk drawer. I thought of the allergic reaction he'd ignored while comforting Audrey through a headache. I thought of every canceled dinner, every dismissive comment, every moment I'd convinced myself his distance was temporary.

"This is insane," Rachel said sharply. "Whitney has been with us for years. You can't just—"

"The decision is made." Logan's tone could have frozen water. Finally, finally, he looked at me. His eyes held no apology, no regret. Only the cold calculation of someone solving an equation. "The exchange happens tonight. Eight o'clock at the warehouse on Fifth."

I wanted to scream. To flip the table, to demand he see me as human rather than expendable. Instead, I heard myself ask, "Why me?" My voice sounded distant, disconnected from my body.

Logan adjusted his cufflinks with mechanical precision. "Because they asked for a hostage of equivalent organizational standing, and you're the logical choice." He paused, and something flickered across his face—annoyance at having to explain himself. "Marie and Audrey are irreplaceable. Surely you understand that."

Irreplaceable. The word he'd never once applied to me.

The meeting dissolved into chaos after that—Rachel arguing, others murmuring protests that dissolved under Logan's authoritative dismissals. I sat frozen, watching my fiancé orchestrate my disposal with the same efficiency he applied to contract negotiations. Someone touched my shoulder—Marcus, offering silent support I couldn't acknowledge.

Hours later, the abandoned warehouse loomed before us, all rusted metal and broken windows. Logan's hand gripped my elbow with impersonal firmness as he guided me inside, where harsh fluorescent lights cast everything in sickly yellow. The rival faction's representatives waited in the shadows, faceless and threatening.

Across the concrete expanse, I saw them—Marie and Audrey, bound but unharmed, their makeup still perfect despite their supposed captivity. Marie's eyes found mine, and she smiled. Actually smiled.

"Demonstrate your sincerity," one of the captors demanded.

I didn't understand until Logan's grip on my arm shifted, twisted. Pain exploded through my shoulder as he wrenched it backward with brutal efficiency. The socket gave way with an audible pop, and my scream shattered the warehouse's emptiness. My knees buckled, but Logan held me upright, his other hand finding my wrist.

"Logan, please—" I gasped, tears streaming down my face.

He didn't hesitate. Another twist, another pop, another wave of agony that whited out my vision. My wrist hung at an impossible angle. Through the haze of pain, I felt him strip off my jacket, leaving me shivering and exposed.

"Satisfied?" Logan called out, his voice steady.

The captors released the Webb sisters. I collapsed as Logan let go, my body hitting concrete with bruising force. Through my tears, I watched him rush forward—not to me, but to them. He gathered Marie and Audrey into his arms with such tenderness it stopped my breath. His face transformed with relief and concern, emotions he'd rationed away from me for months.

"Are you hurt?" he murmured to them, checking them over with gentle hands. "Did they touch you?"

I lay on the cold floor, my dislocated joints screaming, watching the man I'd loved choose them even in this moment. The warehouse spun. Darkness crept in from the edges.

Then—footsteps. Quick and purposeful. Shouts, the sound of impact, bodies falling. Through my fading consciousness, I felt strong arms lift me with impossible care.

"I have you," a voice said, low and somehow familiar despite the mask I glimpsed through blurring vision. "You're safe now. I promise."

The words wrapped around me like a blanket from childhood, inexplicably comforting. As the stranger carried me toward a car I couldn't quite focus on, my last coherent thought was wondering why sanctuary could feel like coming home.

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