
Her Escape Thwarted
Chapter 1
The small wrapped box felt warm in my hands as I climbed the stairs to Oliver's apartment, my heart hammering with nervous excitement. Tomorrow would be our wedding day, and I couldn't wait another moment to give him the pocket watch I'd spent weeks engraving with our initials and wedding date. The hallway smelled of old wood and Mrs. Henderson's perpetual pot roast from downstairs, familiar scents that usually comforted me but tonight seemed to fade into background noise against my anticipation.
I'd kept my spare key specifically for moments like this—sweet surprises that would make Oliver smile that crooked grin I'd fallen in love with three years ago. My fingers trembled slightly as I turned the lock, careful to be quiet in case he was sleeping. The apartment was dim, lit only by the soft glow from the bedroom, and I could hear voices—low, intimate murmurs that made me pause.
Maybe he was on the phone with his best man, going over last-minute details. I tiptoed toward the bedroom, clutching the gift box against my chest, ready to surprise him with a whispered "guess who" and a kiss that would chase away any pre-wedding jitters.
But the scene that greeted me when I reached the doorway shattered my world like glass hitting concrete.
Oliver was in bed—our bed, the one we'd picked out together last spring—tangled in sheets with a woman I'd never seen before. Her dark hair spilled across his chest as she laughed at something he whispered, and the sound was musical, confident, nothing like my own nervous giggles. But what made my knees buckle wasn't just seeing them together. It was the delicate gold chain around her neck, and hanging from it like a trophy was my engagement ring—the ring that should have been on my finger in less than twelve hours.
"Oliver?" The word escaped me as barely a whisper, but it cut through their intimate bubble like a knife.
He jerked upright, his face cycling through shock, guilt, and then something that looked almost like annoyance. The woman—this stranger who wore my ring like a prize—turned toward me with a slow, predatory smile that made my skin crawl.
"Well, well," she purred, making no effort to cover herself as she sat up gracefully. "You must be the blushing bride-to-be. I'm Violette Greene." She touched the ring hanging between her breasts with deliberate provocation. "Oliver's told me so much about you."
The gift box slipped from my numb fingers, hitting the hardwood floor with a hollow thud that seemed to echo in the sudden silence. "What... what is this?" I looked between them, desperate for some explanation that would make this nightmare make sense. "Oliver, what is she doing here? Why does she have my ring?"
Oliver ran a hand through his disheveled hair, not meeting my eyes. "Penelope, I can explain—"
"Can you?" Violette interrupted, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "Because I think she deserves to know the truth, don't you, darling?" She leaned against Oliver's shoulder with casual intimacy that spoke of familiarity, of countless nights like this one. "About us. About what we've been planning."
My legs felt unsteady, and I gripped the doorframe for support. "Planning? What are you talking about?"
Violette's smile turned razor-sharp. "Oh, sweet naive Penelope. Did you really think you were his future? You're just... a placeholder. A convenient arrangement while Oliver and I figured out our real lives together." She fingered the ring again, and I wanted to rip it from her throat. "We're both time travelers, you see. From the modern era. We understand each other in ways you never could."
The words hit me like physical blows. Time travelers? It sounded insane, but the casual way she said it, the way Oliver didn't contradict her, made something cold settle in my stomach. "That's impossible. You're lying."
"Am I?" Violette's eyes glittered with malicious delight. "Tell her about the surgery, Oliver. Tell her what we really did while she was unconscious last month."
Oliver's face went pale. "Violette, don't—"
"Don't what? Don't tell her the truth about her precious appendectomy?" Violette laughed, the sound sharp and cruel. "Oh, Penelope, you sweet, trusting little thing. You didn't have appendicitis. You had something much more... permanent removed."
The room tilted, and I felt like I was falling even though I was still standing. "What are you saying?"
"Your uterus, darling," Violette said with vicious satisfaction. "Gone. Removed. Oliver wanted to make sure you could never trap him with children, so we arranged for a very cooperative doctor to take care of that little problem while you were under anesthesia."
The world stopped. Everything stopped. My hand moved instinctively to my abdomen, to the small scar I'd been told was from my life-saving surgery. The surgery that had supposedly saved me from a burst appendix. The surgery that had actually stolen my future, my choice, my very womanhood.
"You're lying," I whispered, but even as I said it, pieces were clicking into place. The longer recovery than expected. Oliver's strange relief afterward. The way he'd been so attentive, so guilty-acting.
"I'm not," Violette said simply. "And now you know exactly where you stand. Tomorrow's wedding? It was never going to happen. Oliver was just waiting for the right moment to break things off. I suppose tonight is as good as any."
Rage, pure and burning, flooded through me. "You monsters. You absolute monsters. I'm calling the police. I'm calling the medical board. You'll both go to prison for this."
I turned to run, to get to the phone, to get help, but Oliver was faster. His hand caught my wrist, and for the first time in three years, I saw something dark and dangerous in his eyes.
"I don't think so, Penelope," he said quietly, and his voice was nothing like the gentle man I thought I'd loved. "You're not going anywhere."
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