
From Wife to Avenger
Chapter 3
I sat alone on the edge of my bed, my body aching from the brutal landing earlier that day. The bedroom—once a sanctuary—felt like a prison now. Through the closed door, I could hear Lewis and Kayleigh's laughter floating up from the living room, punctuated by my son's eager voice joining in. They sounded like a family—a real family—while I sat here, bruised and forgotten on my wedding anniversary.
I twisted my wedding ring around my finger, watching how the diamond caught the dim light from my bedside lamp. Five years. Five years of gradually disappearing, of becoming smaller, of excusing behavior that should never be excused.
"You're overreacting," Lewis would say whenever I questioned Kayleigh's constant presence.
"Mom, you're so boring," Cason would complain when I tried to spend time with him.
Another burst of laughter erupted from downstairs, followed by Kayleigh's voice: "Oh Lewis, you're too much!"
I closed my eyes, remembering the day he proposed. How he'd promised to cherish me forever. How I'd believed him with every fiber of my being. How I'd walked away from everything—my family, my name, my inheritance—all for love.
My father had seen through Lewis immediately. "He's an opportunist, Natasha," he'd warned. "A man who will take everything and give nothing in return."
I'd defended Lewis passionately then, convinced my father was being overprotective and elitist. Our argument had escalated until I'd stormed out, determined to prove that true love existed outside the wealthy circles of the Rivera family.
How wrong I'd been.
With trembling fingers, I reached for my phone—the private one Lewis knew nothing about. I scrolled to a contact I hadn't used in years: "Dad."
My thumb hovered over the call button. Pride had kept me away for so long. Pride and the desperate need to prove I could make this marriage work without my family's wealth or connections.
Another peal of laughter drifted upstairs, this time followed by the unmistakable sound of kissing. In my house. On my anniversary.
I pressed call.
The phone rang three times before his familiar voice answered, cautious and surprised. "Natasha?"
"Daddy," I whispered, my voice breaking. Just that one word unleashed five years of suppressed pain.
"What's happened?" His tone shifted immediately to concern. "Are you hurt?"
"Yes," I admitted, tears streaming down my face. "Not just today. For years."
I told him everything—the emotional abuse, Kayleigh's deliberate cruelty, Cason's transformation under their influence, and finally, today's horror show. With each confession, my voice grew stronger, as if speaking the truth was physically straightening my spine.
"I'll send a car immediately," he said, his voice tight with controlled fury. "Pack only what you need. Leave everything else."
"Lewis won't let me go easily," I warned. "Not once he realizes..."
"Realizes what?"
"Who I really am. What I'm worth." The bitter irony wasn't lost on me. The man who'd treated me like nothing would soon discover I was worth millions.
"Let me handle Lewis Gardner," my father said, his voice carrying the weight of the Rivera family's considerable power. "You just get ready to come home."
Home. The word brought fresh tears to my eyes.
"Daddy, I'm sorry," I whispered. "You were right about him."
"We'll have time for that later," he said gently. "Right now, I just want my daughter safe."
After hanging up, I sat motionless for several minutes, listening to the continuing celebration downstairs. Then I stood, moving to the closet to gather essentials.
A knock at the bedroom door made me freeze.
"Natasha?" Lewis's voice was slurred with alcohol. "Stop sulking and come downstairs. Kayleigh thinks you're being ridiculous."
I said nothing, continuing to silently pack a small bag.
"Did you hear me?" he demanded, jiggling the locked doorknob. "I said come downstairs!"
"I'm not feeling well," I replied, keeping my voice neutral. "Go enjoy the party."
"This is why Kayleigh is so much better company," he muttered, loud enough for me to hear. "She doesn't make everything about herself."
His footsteps retreated down the hall, and I exhaled slowly.
In just a few hours, a car would arrive. In just a few hours, I would begin my journey back to being Natasha Rivera, not the shadow of a woman I'd become as Mrs. Gardner.
I slipped my wedding ring off and placed it on the nightstand.
This time, when I walked away, I wouldn't be looking back.
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