
From Savior to Seducer
Chapter 2
The mansion felt different now—oppressive where it had once felt welcoming. Every shadow seemed to watch me, every creak of the old wood floors sounded like whispered accusations. I sat on the edge of the bed Maverick and I had shared for three years, my wedding dress still hanging in the closet like a ghost of broken promises.
Mrs. Henderson appeared in the doorway without knocking, her silver hair pulled back in its usual severe bun. She carried a small silver tray with a glass of water and what looked like vitamins—large, white pills that caught the afternoon light streaming through the windows.
"Time for your medication, Miss Murray," she said, her voice as cold as the marble floors beneath her sensible shoes.
I looked up at her, confusion clouding my thoughts. "Medication? I'm not sick, Mrs. Henderson. I just need to see Maverick. Where is he?"
Her thin lips pressed into an even thinner line. "Mr. Richardson is attending to family matters. Miss Nala requires his full attention after what you did to her."
The accusation hit me like a physical blow. "I didn't do anything to Nala. You know that's not true."
"The family has decided you need these vitamins for your... condition." Her eyes flicked meaningfully to my stomach, where my hand instinctively moved to protect the tiny life growing inside me. The baby Maverick had been so thrilled about just weeks ago, when I'd shared the news with trembling excitement.
Something cold settled in my chest. "What kind of vitamins?"
"The kind that will help you think more clearly about your situation here." Mrs. Henderson set the tray on the nightstand with deliberate precision. "Mr. Richardson's orders."
I stared at the pills, my mind racing. Maverick's orders. Not a request, not a suggestion—orders. "I want to speak to him first."
"That's not possible. He's made it very clear that he doesn't wish to see you until this matter with Miss Nala is resolved." She folded her hands in front of her, waiting.
My throat tightened. "How long will that be?"
"As long as it takes."
I reached for my phone on the nightstand, but Mrs. Henderson's voice stopped me. "Your phone service has been temporarily suspended. For the family's protection, you understand. We can't have you contacting the press or making wild accusations."
My hands shook as I grabbed the phone anyway, pressing the power button. Nothing. The screen remained black. "You can't do this. You can't keep me here like a prisoner."
"You're not a prisoner, Miss Murray. You're family. And family protects each other, even when one member has... lost their way." Her eyes were as hard as granite. "Now, take your vitamins."
I looked at the pills again, something deep in my gut screaming danger. "What if I refuse?"
"Then I'll have to call the men Mr. Richardson left to ensure your safety. I don't think either of us wants that."
The threat hung in the air between us like smoke. I thought of the security guards I'd seen stationed throughout the house—men I'd never noticed before today. Men who weren't there to keep intruders out, but to keep me in.
With trembling fingers, I picked up the first pill. It was larger than any vitamin I'd ever seen, with no markings or identifying features. "What are these really?"
"Medicine to help you think clearly. To help you understand your place in this family."
I placed the pill on my tongue, my mouth dry as dust. The water felt like swallowing broken glass. The second pill followed, then the third.
"Good girl," Mrs. Henderson said, collecting the tray. "I'll check on you in a few hours. Rest now. You'll need your strength for what's coming."
After she left, I heard the distinctive click of a lock engaging. I ran to the door and tried the handle—it wouldn't turn. The windows faced a three-story drop to the gardens below, and I could see security cameras mounted at every corner.
Twenty minutes later, the cramping started.
I doubled over on the bathroom floor as waves of pain rolled through my abdomen. My body felt like it was turning against itself, rejecting something precious. Blood began to seep through my clothes, and I knew with horrible certainty what those pills had been.
"Maverick!" I screamed, pounding on the locked door until my fists were bruised. "MAVERICK, HELP ME!"
But only silence answered. The man who had promised to love and protect me, who had gotten down on one knee in artificial snow and sworn I was his world—he wasn't coming.
As I bled alone on the cold marble floor, losing the child we had created together, I finally understood the truth that had been staring me in the face for three years.
I had never been saved at all.
I had simply been moved from one cage to another.
You may also like





