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His Unwanted Wife, Her Vengeful Heart

His Unwanted Wife, Her Vengeful Heart

To save my father and our family's gallery, I was forced to marry the ruthless Caleb Wiley. He treated me like a commodity, his heart belonging only to another woman, Eva. When my father needed a life-saving surgery, Caleb made me a cruel offer. To get the money, I had to drink a fatal allergen during a high-stakes poker game. I drank it and nearly died. I woke up in the hospital to learn the money was never sent. My father was dead. Caleb had abandoned me to chase after Eva, later trading me to a lecherous judge like a piece of property. My life, my father's life-it was all worth less than his obsession. But then I found the proof. His mother had orchestrated everything-my family's ruin, my father's murder. My grief turned to ice. From the shadows, I began to broadcast every one of the Wiley family's crimes to the world.
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Chapter 6

Isabelle Hensley POV: "Trivial?" I snarled, my voice raw with fury. "Do you even know what suffering is, Eva? Do you have any concept of what it means to lose everything, to be treated like dirt, to have your father die because of their callous indifference?" I stepped closer, my eyes blazing, ignoring the throbbing pain in my ribs. "Let me tell you what suffering is. It's watching your father waste away, knowing you can't save him. It's drinking poison to win money for his surgery, only to be abandoned while you choke on your own blood. It's waking up to learn he's gone and finding out the money never came. It's being traded like chattel to a monster, then beaten and thrown from a balcony. It's being doused in filth, gasping for air, while the man you married stands by and watches!" My voice cracked, raw with emotion. "And you, with your perfectly manicured nails and your endless 'philosophical enlightenment,' dare to call that unpleasantness?" Eva actually took a step back, a flicker of genuine fear in her eyes. Good. Let her feel something for once. Just then, Caleb appeared at the garden entrance, his phone pressed to his ear, his face tight with annoyance. He saw Eva's pale face, then my blazing one, and his jaw clenched. Eva immediately moved to him, clutching his arm. "Caleb, darling, thank goodness you're here. She's being difficult. She refuses to sign the waiver. It's just a formality, but she's making such a fuss." She looked at him, her eyes wide and pleading. "You said you needed this for us, for our future." She was good. She always knew how to twist the knife, how to make her desires his priorities. Caleb looked at me, a flicker of something in his eyes-irritation? Relief that he didn't have to deal with it directly? He hesitated for a fraction of a second, his gaze dropping to the waiver in my hand. "Caleb, please," I pleaded, my voice softer, desperate. "Don't make me do this. Don't let them get away with it. My father…" Eva let out a dramatic sigh. "If you can't even handle this one small thing, Caleb, maybe we're not as aligned as I thought. Maybe I made a mistake coming back." She started to pull away from him. Caleb' s eyes hardened. That was it. That was his breaking point. He wouldn' t risk losing her again. He turned to me, his face a mask of cold resolve. "Sign it, Isabelle." His voice was low, dangerous. "But it's not right!" I protested. "It' s a cover-up! It's absolving criminals! For a wooden bird, Caleb! You traded my life for a wooden bird!" He scoffed. "It's not about the bird, Isabelle. It's about protecting what's mine. My future. Our reputation." He took a step closer, his voice dropping to a menacing whisper. "Or do you want me to remind everyone of the little 'accidents' that befell the Hensley gallery during your father's final years? Or perhaps the real reason your mother left?" My blood ran cold. He knew? He dared to use that against me? "You wouldn't." His eyes were steel. "Try me. Sign the damn paper." My hand trembled, my vision blurring with tears of impotent rage. He had truly thought of everything. He had me cornered. For my father, I had endured. For my own sanity, I had to survive. And right now, survival meant signing. My fingers, stiff and aching, found the pen. I scrawled my name, my signature a shaky testament to my defeat. The paper blurred through a curtain of tears. My body shook with suppressed sobs, my chest aching as if a thousand thorns were tearing at my heart. It was over. All of it. The last shred of my dignity, gone. Caleb watched me, a flicker of something unreadable in his eyes, a fleeting shadow of discomfort. But it was fleeting. He snatched the paper from my hand, scanning it quickly. Eva beamed, a triumphant smile lighting up her face. "Perfect, darling. See? Wasn't so hard, was it?" She squeezed Caleb's arm, her eyes sparkling. "Now, let's go. That gala won't attend itself, and I need you." Caleb nodded, a smug satisfaction on his face. He glanced at me one last time, a cold, empty look, then turned and followed Eva out of the garden, their footsteps fading into the distance. I crumpled to the ground, the last thread of my endurance snapping. My body shook, tears streaming down my face, hot and furious. It wasn't just the pain; it was the utter, soul-crushing despair. I lay there, gasping, until the darkness swallowed me whole. I woke in a small, anonymous motel room, the kind with thin walls and flickering neon signs outside. Weeks had passed. Weeks of fever, of pain, of pushing myself to heal, to survive. The memory of that day in the garden still burned, a constant ache in my soul. But something else burned too: a cold, hard resolve. I wasn't just a victim anymore. I was a weapon. I began to pack the few belongings I had. Clothes, a worn copy of my favorite poetry book, a small, silver locket with my father's picture inside. Everything else I left behind. Everything associated with Caleb, with the Wileys, with that house of horrors. The designer clothes, the expensive jewelry, the grand piano-all of it, I cast aside. It was tainted. It wasn't mine. My hands, though still a little stiff, traced the outline of the cello I had once loved. I couldn't take it. But I could get another. I could play again. I would. I looked at the cheap, plain suitcase, then at the mirror. My face was pale, my eyes haunted, but there was a new glint there, a steely resolve. I was no longer Isabelle Hensley, the victim. I was something new, something forged in the fires of betrayal and pain. I was ready.