
Her Escape Thwarted
Chapter 2
Time became a meaningless blur in the darkness of the basement. I couldn't tell if it had been hours or days since Oliver had dragged me down here, his fingers digging into my arm with bruising force, his face a mask of cold fury I'd never seen before. The storage room was small, windowless, with nothing but a thin blanket and a bucket for necessities. The concrete floor leached away my body heat, and the darkness was so complete that I couldn't see my own hand in front of my face.
I curled into myself, trying to preserve warmth, trying to make sense of how my life had shattered so completely. Just days ago, I'd been planning my wedding, dreaming of our future together. Now I knew the truth—there had never been a future for us. Just Oliver's lies and Violette's malice, and the horrifying reality of what they'd done to my body without my consent.
"Still sulking, princess?"
The door creaked open, and Violette's silhouette appeared against the dim light from the hallway. She set down a plate with what looked like half a sandwich and a small cup of water. The sight of food made my stomach cramp painfully, but I refused to lunge for it like an animal while she watched.
"You know," she said conversationally, leaning against the doorframe, "I almost feel sorry for you. So pathetic with your little dreams of being Oliver's wife, having his children." She laughed, the sound like broken glass. "As if someone like him would ever want to be tied down by someone like you."
I swallowed hard, fighting back tears. "Why are you doing this?"
"Because I can." She shrugged. "Because it's fun watching you realize how little power you actually have. Did you really think your sad little aerospace dreams meant anything? Women like you don't change the world, Penelope. They just take up space until someone more important comes along."
The door slammed shut again, plunging me back into darkness. I fumbled for the sandwich, forcing myself to eat slowly, to make it last. I needed my strength if I was going to find a way out of this nightmare.
As the hours stretched on, the darkness began to play tricks on my mind. I kept hearing my father's voice, the same cruel tones he'd used when locking me in the closet as punishment when I was a child. "This is for your own good, Penny. You'll thank me someday."
I pressed my hands over my ears, but the memories kept coming. The suffocating darkness. The helplessness. The certainty that no one was coming to save me.
"No one's coming this time either," I whispered to myself, my voice cracking from disuse. "If I'm getting out, I have to do it myself."
On what I thought must be the third day—judging by the meals Oliver and Violette had brought—I heard an unfamiliar sound. The whir of wheels on the basement floor, followed by a surprised gasp.
"Oh my God."
A woman's voice, not Violette's. Older, with a slight tremor. Light flooded the room as the door swung open wider than it had since my imprisonment began.
I squinted against the sudden brightness, making out the silhouette of a woman in a wheelchair. Mercy Wallace—Oliver's mother. I'd met her only twice, finding her cold and judgmental. Now she stared at me with horror in her eyes.
"What on earth... Penelope? What are you doing down here?"
I tried to speak, but my throat was too dry. I gestured weakly at the water cup, and she wheeled closer, helping me drink.
"Oliver said you'd run off," she said slowly, her eyes taking in my bruised wrists, my unwashed hair, the bucket in the corner. "He said you'd gotten cold feet about the wedding."
"He's lying," I managed, my voice a painful rasp. "They've been keeping me prisoner. They... they did something to me, Mrs. Wallace. A surgery. Without my consent."
Something shifted in her expression—recognition, perhaps. Or memory. "Who is 'they'?"
"Oliver and Violette. The woman he's been seeing behind my back."
Mercy's face hardened. "I should have known. That woman has been coming around for months. Always when she thought I was at my physical therapy appointments."
Hope flickered in my chest for the first time in days. "Please, you have to help me. They'll kill me if they think I'll expose what they did."
Mercy looked away, conflict evident in her expression. "He's my son."
"And he's a monster," I whispered, tears finally breaking free. "Please. I just want to live my life. To be free. Don't you know what that feels like? To be trapped?"
Her eyes met mine, and I saw something there—understanding. Recognition. She wheeled backward slightly.
"I'll... I need to think. I'll come back."
The door closed again, but not completely. A thin strip of light remained, like a promise. Like hope.
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