
He Crushed My Fingers to Protect His Mistress
Chapter 3
Voss’s hand clamped over my wrist like a steel vice, his fingers digging into the tendons I needed to protect. My pianist’s hands—the hands that had once commanded concert halls—were now pinned between his thick, sweating palm and the leather couch. I twisted, but the movement only seemed to excite him further. His breath was hot against my face, reeking of expensive scotch and something rotten underneath.
“Silas said you’d be accommodating,” he murmured, his voice a low, menacing growl. “I always get what I pay for, darling.”
My knee came up hard, connecting with his thigh. The shock of it gave me just enough leverage to wrench my arm free. I lunged for the door, my heels catching on the plush carpet. The deadbolt wouldn’t budge—Silas had locked me in.
“Feisty,” Voss chuckled, his amusement chilling. “I like that.”
A service door at the back of the gallery. A faint glow of an exit sign. I ran, my pulse hammering in my ears, Voss’s heavy footsteps pounding behind me. The door led to a narrow stairwell, concrete and exposed wiring. A construction project, half-finished and abandoned for the weekend.
I plunged into the darkness, one hand trailing the rough wall for balance. Voss’s voice echoed from above, slurred and angry. “You’re making a mistake, Emory! This deal is worth more than you’ll ever be!”
The stairs were uneven, the lighting sparse. In my panic, I missed the edge. One moment I was running, the next—nothing. Just air, and then a sickening weightlessness.
I hit the concrete hard, my body tumbling down the unforgiving steps. Pain exploded through me, sharp and blinding. I came to rest at the bottom, the world spinning in slow, sickening circles. Something warm and wet trickled down my thigh. Blood. Too much blood.
I fumbled for my phone, my fingers trembling as I called a taxi. Voss’s footsteps had gone quiet, but I couldn’t stay. I couldn’t let him find me like this.
The emergency room lights were too bright, the antiseptic smell burning my nostrils. A nurse with kind eyes helped me onto a gurney, her touch gentle as she cut away my ruined dress. The doctor’s face was carefully neutral when he returned, but I saw the pity in his eyes.
“Mrs. Hunter, I’m very sorry,” he said quietly. “The fall caused a miscarriage. You were approximately eight weeks pregnant.”
The words hit me like another fall. Pregnant. I had been pregnant and hadn’t known. A baby I would never meet, gone before I even knew to hope for it.
I called Silas from the hospital corridor, my hand pressed against the sterile wall for support. He answered on the fourth ring, Mabel’s laughter echoing in the background.
“Did you close the deal?” he demanded, not bothering with a greeting. “Voss is impossible to pin down.”
“I’m in the hospital,” I whispered, my voice breaking. “Silas, I—”
“What the hell, Emory? I sent you to negotiate, not create more problems. Is Voss still on board?”
I closed my eyes, the final thread of hope snapping clean. “Yes,” I lied. “The deal is done.”
“Fine. I’ll send a car. This is the last time I’ll clean up your mess.”
I didn’t tell him about the baby. What was the point? He had made his choice clear, and it wasn’t me. It would never be me again.
Three days later, I stood in the quiet cemetery, seeking comfort in the only place I ever truly felt at peace. My mother’s grave had been my sanctuary through the worst of Silas’s coldness. But as I rounded the familiar oak tree, I froze.
The plot was unrecognizable. My mother’s elegant headstone, the one I had selected with trembling hands after her funeral, had been pushed to the far corner of the plot. In its place stood a gleaming white marble monument, ornate and ostentatious. An angel wept over a small, heart-shaped marker.
I stepped closer, my legs unsteady, and read the inscription: “Princess, beloved companion of Mabel Morrison. Forever in our hearts.”
My mother’s grave—the final resting place of the woman who had given me everything—had been desecrated to make room for Mabel’s dog.
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