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My Husband Imprisoned Me to Fund His Mistress’s Career Novel Cover

My Husband Imprisoned Me to Fund His Mistress’s Career

Day 1,826. The charcoal crumbled between my thumb and forefinger as I added the vertical slash to the concrete wall behind the water heater. Dust coated my skin, a dry, gray powder that matched the rest of my existence. Five years. Sixty months of silence, broken only by the hum of the ventilation system and the heavy thud of the deadbolt sliding home. My sanctuary. My prison. The heavy steel door at the top of the stairs groaned. I shoved the charcoal shard into the crack between the floor and the wall, wiping my hands on my oversized gray sweatpants. I didn't need a mirror to know I looked like a ghost—pale, thin, eyes too large for a face that hadn't felt direct sunlight since the accident.
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Chapter 5

The internet didn't just buzz; it screamed.

Magnus had set up a secure workstation in the library, a monolithic screen glowing with the fallout of my midnight rebellion. "The Phoenix Collection"—released under the pseudonym *Ember*—was trending globally. Comments rolled in like a tidal wave, a blur of praise for the "raw," "visceral," and "haunting" designs. They saw the agony in the gold wire wrapping around shattered gemstones. They saw the beauty in the broken things.

I sat curled in the leather armchair, my knees pulled to my chest, watching the numbers climb. It felt surreal, like watching a ghost conduct an orchestra. That was my pain they were liking. My trauma they were sharing.

"Look at this," Magnus said, his voice low and vibrating with a grim satisfaction. He pointed to a fashion blog's headline: *Is This the End of Lynch Designs? Newcomer 'Ember' Makes Haley Lynch Look Like Costume Jewelry.*

My chest tightened. It wasn't pride I felt, but a dark, curling heat. Vengeance. It tasted like ash and iron.

"She knows," I whispered, tracing the scar on my wrist. "Haley knows."

Magnus turned, his grey eyes locking onto mine. "Let her know. Let her feel the ground crumbling beneath her feet."

The phone on the desk shattered the moment. It wasn't a ring; it was a shrill, demanding shriek. A secure line. Only one person had that number.

Magnus didn't hesitate. He tapped the screen, and the face of my nightmare filled the room.

Wyatt looked deranged. His tie was loosened, his hair disheveled, and behind him, his office looked like a war zone. Glass littered the floor. A chair was overturned. He was breathing hard, his nostrils flaring like a bull seeing red.

"You," Wyatt spat, the word a bullet aimed straight at Magnus. Then his eyes shifted, scanning the room until they found me. The blood drained from his face, leaving him a mask of pale fury. "Tessa."

I couldn't breathe. My lungs seized. The sight of him—even through a screen—sent a phantom ache through my womb, a reminder of what he had stolen.

"She looks good, doesn't she, brother?" Magnus said, his voice terrifyingly calm. He moved to stand behind my chair, his hand resting protectively on the backrest, not touching me, but close enough to be a shield. "Better than she ever looked in your basement."

Wyatt's hands clenched into fists on his desk. "You stole my wife, Magnus. You stole my property. You think a shell company in the Caymans could hide the shipping manifests? I know where you are."

"Then come," Magnus challenged. "The French police would love to hear about the unlicensed surgery performed in New York."

"I don't need police," Wyatt snarled. He picked up a tablet and held it to the camera. The grainy footage was unmistakable. James. My brother, lying still and pale in that sterile room, the ventilator hissing its rhythmic song of life. "I still have the leverage, Tessa. Remember? One phone call, and I shut it off. He dies today unless you're on a plane back to me within the hour."

The room spun. The old panic clawed at my throat, the conditioned response of a prisoner. I started to rise, to beg, to promise him anything—

Magnus's hand landed on my shoulder. Heavy. Grounding. "Sit down, Tessa."

He looked at the screen, a cold smile touching his lips. "Check the timestamp on your feed, Wyatt."

Wyatt frowned, squinting at the tablet. "What?"

"That feed is on a loop," Magnus said, checking his watch. "My team extracted James from the facility three hours ago. He's currently at 30,000 feet, en route to a specialist clinic in Zurich. The doctors there are... significantly more ethical than yours."

Wyatt froze. He tapped the screen frantically, refreshing the feed. The image flickered and died, replaced by static. The silence that followed was heavy, suffocating.

"You have nothing," Magnus said, his voice dropping an octave. "You have no leverage. No wife. No heir. And soon, no company."

Wyatt roared, a sound of pure, impotent rage, and swept the tablet off his desk. It smashed against the wall as the connection cut. The screen went black.

I slumped back in the chair, trembling. "James... is he really..."

"He's safe," Magnus murmured, kneeling beside me. "I promised you, Tessa. I leave nothing to chance."

***

But Wyatt didn't stay in New York. We knew he wouldn't. A narcissist doesn't accept defeat; he rewrites the narrative.

Three days later, the air in the estate changed. It wasn't a sound or a sight, but a feeling—the prickling on the back of my neck that said *predator*.

I was in the garden, pruning the roses Magnus had planted. The thorns snagged my gloves, but I didn't mind. It felt good to control something sharp. Through the telephoto lens of my own mind, I felt watched.

I didn't know that a mile away, nestled in the dense foliage of the neighboring hill, Wyatt lowered his binoculars. He wasn't looking at the roses. He was looking at my mouth.

I had smiled. Just a small, fleeting thing when a butterfly landed on my trowel. But he had seen it.

From his vantage point, Wyatt gripped the casing of the long-range scope until his knuckles turned white. He had never seen that smile. Not at their wedding. Not in the five years of their marriage. That smile belonged to him, yet she was giving it to the air, to the flowers, to the world that Magnus had given her.

He adjusted the earpiece. The crackle of audio from the bug his bribed delivery driver had planted near the gate filtered through.

*"...she's healing, Magnus. I heard her humming today."*

Wyatt's jaw tightened until his teeth ached. Healing. Without him.

"She doesn't get to heal," he whispered to the empty French countryside. "Not unless I say so."

He reached into his jacket pocket, his fingers brushing the cold steel of a pistol. He didn't want the police. He didn't want lawyers. He wanted to wipe that smile off her face and paint it back on himself, stroke by stroke.

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