
From Savior to Seducer
Chapter 3
Three days after losing my baby, I finally had the strength to stand. The cramping had subsided to a dull, constant ache—a physical echo of the emptiness inside me. Mrs. Henderson brought meals on trays, took them away mostly untouched, and said nothing about the bloodstained sheets she'd silently replaced.
I needed answers. I needed to see Maverick's face when I asked him why.
The mansion's east wing had always been off-limits during my time here—Maverick's private domain where he conducted business and took important calls. I'd never questioned it before, accepting his explanation that some matters required confidentiality. Now, as I moved through the marble corridors on unsteady legs, every locked door felt like another lie I'd been too blind to see.
Voices drifted from behind the heavy oak door of his study. Laughter. Light, intimate, without a trace of concern.
I pressed myself against the wall beside the doorframe, my heart hammering so hard I was certain they'd hear it. The door stood slightly ajar—careless, or perhaps they felt so secure in their deception that caution no longer mattered.
"God, I thought she'd never take those pills," Nala's voice, honeyed with satisfaction. "Did you see Henderson's face? I think even she felt a little guilty."
Maverick's low chuckle made my stomach turn. "Henderson does what she's paid to do. Though I admit, the wedding interruption was your masterpiece. That lingerie touch—brilliant."
"I couldn't resist." There was a rustling sound, fabric shifting. Through the crack, I could see Nala perched on Maverick's lap in his leather desk chair, her arms draped around his neck. He toyed with a strand of her hair, his expression more relaxed than I'd ever seen it. "She looked so devastated. Like a little lost puppy."
"She served her purpose perfectly," Maverick said, his hand sliding possessively around Nala's waist. "Three years of playing the devoted fiancée, the perfect shield for us. Even Barrett grew attached to her, which made the whole charade more convincing."
My hand flew to my mouth, stifling a sound that threatened to escape. Barrett. That sweet, damaged little boy who'd clung to me, who'd called me 'almost-mama' when he thought no one was listening.
"And now?" Nala traced a finger along Maverick's jaw. "What do we do with our little problem?"
"Once we figure out how to dispose of the situation cleanly, we can finally stop pretending." He caught her hand and kissed her palm. "No more sneaking around. No more playing house with someone so beneath us."
"Beneath us," Nala repeated with a laugh. "You really did save her from that auction just to use her, didn't you? All that press coverage, the hero narrative—it was perfect."
"The timing couldn't have been better. I needed someone grateful, someone who'd never question the arrangement. Someone from nowhere, with no family to interfere." His voice held the casual detachment of discussing a business transaction. "She believed every word. Every gesture. God, it was almost too easy."
The hallway tilted beneath my feet. My vision blurred with tears I refused to let fall—not yet, not where they might hear.
Three years. Every tender moment, every whispered promise, every time he'd held me through nightmares about Tony and sworn I was safe now—all of it, scripted. Rehearsed. A performance worthy of the proposal that had made headlines across Manhattan.
I'd been so desperate to believe in rescue, in love, in second chances, that I'd never looked for the strings attached to my savior's hands.
"What about the baby?" Nala's voice turned sharp. "That could have complicated things."
"Handled." Maverick's tone was dismissive, as if discussing the weather. "An unfortunate complication that needed resolving. Can't have loose ends when we're finally ready to go public."
The casual cruelty of those words—our child reduced to a 'complication,' a 'loose end' to be eliminated—shattered something fundamental inside me. The last fragile piece of the woman who'd believed in fairy tales finally, irreversibly broke.
I stepped back from the door on silent feet, my body moving on autopilot while my mind struggled to process the magnitude of the betrayal. The marble floor was cold beneath my bare feet. When had I stopped wearing shoes? When had I stopped being a person and become a prop in someone else's elaborate lie?
But I'd heard enough. More than enough.
The truth was a knife in my chest, and I was bleeding out in a hallway lined with expensive art and fresh flowers—beautiful things that meant nothing, just like everything else in this house.
I had to get out. I had to—
But first, I needed to look him in the eye. I needed him to know that I knew.
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