
My Fiancé Sabotaged My Career to Crown His Lover
Chapter 4
The transition from the sanitarium to the Alexander estate wasn’t a discharge; it was a prison transfer. Marcus claimed the paparazzi were circling the hospital, that I needed the quiet of the countryside to heal. But as the iron gates of his lakeside manor slammed shut behind the black Mercedes, the heavy *clang* echoed in my chest like a gavel striking a sound block.
I was installed in the master suite, a room of velvet drapes and antique mahogany that smelled of lemon polish and suffocation. But the true cruelty wasn't the isolation. It was the guest house.
"Gabriella has graciously offered to assist with your recovery," Marcus said, smoothing the lapel of his coat as he stood by the window. Outside, the lake was a sheet of gray ice, unforgiving and still. "She calls it 'visualization therapy.' Seeing a Prima dance will help your mirror neurons fire. It will remind your body of what it’s supposed to do."
He wasn't trying to heal me. He was parading my replacement in front of me, a constant, living reminder of everything he had stolen.
Two days later, the estate swarmed with cars. A "Winter Garden Party," Marcus called it—a PR stunt to quell the rumors that Melody Rogers had vanished off the face of the earth. I was dressed in a pale silk gown that hung loosely on my emaciated frame and wheeled onto the terrace like a prop in a grotesque play.
The air was biting, carrying the scent of pine and expensive perfume. Guests in furs and cashmere mingled, their laughter sharp and brittle like breaking glass. I sat in my wheelchair, a tartan blanket tucked over my legs, forcing a smile that felt like a grimace.
Then I saw him.
Grandfather Warren stood near the ice sculpture, looking older than I remembered. His shoulders were stooped, his eyes scanning the crowd with a frantic intensity. When his gaze landed on me, his face crumpled with relief. He took a step forward, his cane hitting the stone paver with a solid *thwack*.
"Melody!"
My heart leaped. "Grandpa—"
A hand clamped onto my shoulder. It wasn't a caress; it was a vice.
"Don't," Marcus whispered, his lips brushing my ear. To the onlookers, it looked like a tender moment between lovers. To me, it was a chokehold. "If you say a single word about the hospital, if you make a scene, I will have Dr. Holt declare you mentally incompetent by morning. You will spend the rest of your life in a state facility, drooling on yourself. Do you understand?"
The threat was cold, precise, and entirely credible. I swallowed the scream building in my throat, my eyes burning. I looked at Warren and gave a small, defeated nod. Marcus released his grip, patting my shoulder as he straightened up to greet a senator.
I couldn't breathe. The perfume, the lies, the suffocating weight of Marcus’s presence—it was too much.
While Marcus was distracted by the senator’s wife, I unlocked the brakes of the wheelchair. My legs were weak, trembling from weeks of induced atrophy, but the adrenaline coursing through my veins was a powerful anesthetic. I pushed myself up. My knees buckled, then held.
*Step. Step.*
I moved toward the edge of the terrace, away from the suffocating crowd, toward the frozen lake. The wind whipped my hair across my face, stinging my cheeks, but I welcomed the pain. It was real.
I reached the stone balustrade overlooking the ice, gripping the cold railing until my knuckles turned white.
"You shouldn't be walking, sweetie. You look like a newborn fawn. All wobble and no grace."
I didn't turn. I knew that voice. It was the sound of poison wrapped in silk.
Gabriella leaned against a stone urn, sipping champagne. She wore a dress the color of fresh blood, a violent slash of red against the snowy landscape. She looked vibrant, alive, everything I was not.
"Why?" I asked, my voice raspy. "You have the role. You have him. Why do you need to torture me?"
Gabriella laughed, a low, throaty sound. She set her glass down on the snowy railing and stepped closer, invading my personal space.
"Because it's funny, Melody. God, you have no idea how funny it was."
I turned to face her, the wind tearing at my dress. "What are you talking about?"
"For years," she sneered, her mask of civility slipping to reveal the rot beneath. "Marcus and I would lie in bed at his penthouse, and he’d tell me about your little dinners. How you’d cook for him, how you’d look at him with those big, worshipful doe eyes. We laughed about it. 'The little savior,' he called you. He never touched you because he wanted to, Melody. He did it because he owed a debt. You were never his fiancée. You were his invoice."
The world tilted. The gray sky spun. It wasn't just the career. It wasn't just the injury. My entire life, every memory of warmth, every 'I love you'—it was all a joke. A punchline shared between monsters in the dark.
"You're lying," I whispered, though the hollow ache in my chest told me I wasn't.
"Am I?" Gabriella smirked, glancing back at the party where Marcus held court, the king of his frozen kingdom. "Look at him. Does he look like a man mourning his lover's tragedy? Or does he look like a man who finally cleared the debris from his path?"
She stepped closer, her eyes flashing with malice. "You're done, Melody. You're just a broken toy that hasn't been thrown out yet."
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