
Love Beyond the Ashes
Chapter 3
The parking garage was nearly empty when I finally left the office that night. The quarterly reports had taken longer than expected, but I needed the distraction. Every number, every projection was a reminder that this company—my life's work—was slipping through my fingers like sand.
I was fumbling for my car keys when I heard the footsteps behind me. Too deliberate. Too close. Before I could turn around, something hard pressed against my back.
"Don't scream," a gruff voice commanded. "Walk."
My blood turned to ice. I'd heard about kidnappings in the news, but they happened to other people. Not to Helena Gardner. Not to someone who controlled board meetings and million-dollar deals. But as rough hands guided me toward a black van, I realized how naive that thinking had been.
The warehouse smelled of rust and abandonment. They dragged me through a maze of empty crates and broken machinery until we reached a small room lit by a single bare bulb. The chair they forced me into was metal and cold, the rope they used to bind my wrists rough against my skin.
"What do you want?" I demanded, trying to keep my voice steady. "Money? I can give you money."
The larger of my two captors—both wearing ski masks—laughed. "This isn't about money, lady."
He pulled out a cell phone and dialed a number. After a moment, he held it out toward me, the speaker crackling to life.
"Helena?" Reyna's voice was sickeningly sweet. "I hope you're comfortable. I wanted you to hear something special."
My stomach dropped as familiar sounds filled the small room. The creak of my bedroom door. Christian's low chuckle. The rustle of expensive sheets—my sheets.
"Christian," Reyna's voice was breathless now, intimate in a way that made bile rise in my throat. "She never appreciated what she had, did she?"
"No," came his reply, rough with desire. "She took everything for granted."
I squeezed my eyes shut, but I couldn't block out the sounds. The whispered endearments. The soft moans. The rhythmic creaking of the bed where I'd slept beside him for three years. They were in my home, in my bedroom, destroying the last sanctuary I had left.
"Are you listening, Helena?" Reyna's voice cut through the intimate sounds. "This is what it feels like to lose everything. To have someone take what's rightfully yours and throw it away on someone who could never deserve it."
Tears burned my eyes, but I refused to let them fall. Not here. Not in front of these men who watched me with cold curiosity.
"The real Gardner daughter is finally home," Reyna continued, her voice punctuated by Christian's groans. "And she's taking back everything that was stolen from her."
The phone went silent. One of my captors pocketed it and walked away, leaving me alone with the larger man who seemed more interested in his own phone than guarding me.
That's when I noticed the broken glass near the far wall—a shard from what might have once been a window. As my captor's attention drifted, I began working the rope against the sharp edge of my chair, the metal slowly fraying the fibers.
It took twenty agonizing minutes, but finally the rope gave way. My wrists were raw and bleeding, but my hands were free. I waited until the guard stepped outside for what sounded like a cigarette break, then made my move.
The warehouse was a labyrinth, but panic gave me clarity. I ran through the maze of machinery and crates, my heels echoing off the concrete floor. Behind me, I heard shouting as they discovered my escape.
"She's loose! Find her!"
I burst through a side door into the cool night air, my lungs burning as I stumbled onto the street. The warehouse district was deserted, but I could see lights in the distance. I ran toward them, my designer suit torn and my hair disheveled, looking like exactly what I was—a woman running for her life.
As I reached the main road, I heard one of my captors on his phone behind me.
"Yeah, she got away... No, we can't go after her now, too many witnesses... The real Gardner daughter isn't going to like this..."
The real Gardner daughter. Reyna had orchestrated this. She'd had me kidnapped, forced me to listen as she destroyed the last piece of my marriage, and now her hired thugs were discussing me like a failed business transaction.
I flagged down a taxi with shaking hands, giving the driver the address of the nearest hospital. As the city lights blurred past the window, I finally allowed myself to process what had happened. Christian had betrayed me completely. Reyna wasn't just taking my place—she was systematically destroying every aspect of my existence.
But I was alive. And as long as I was breathing, this war wasn't over.
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