
My Husband Sold Our Child for Business
Chapter 3
I stumbled, catching myself on the frame. "Richard, please—"
"Not another word." His voice was deadly quiet, his public mask slipping to reveal the rage beneath. "Not one more word until we're home."
The car pulled through our estate gates, the familiar landscaping now seeming like prison grounds. As soon as we were inside the house, Richard's control snapped.
"What the hell were you thinking?" he roared, slamming his fist against the wall. "Going to Harrington's office looking like some deranged homeless person? Do you have any idea what you've done?"
"What I've done?" My voice trembled with disbelief. "You sold our daughter!"
"I secured our future!" He loosened his tie with sharp, angry movements. "And you may have just ruined everything with your hysterical display. Harrington called me before I even reached the building—he's questioning my judgment, wondering if I can control my own household."
Richard's expression shifted suddenly, the fury draining away, replaced by something almost worse—calculated patience. He approached me slowly, as one might a skittish animal.
"Diane, darling." His voice softened. "You're not thinking clearly. This has all been a shock, I understand that."
He reached for my face, brushing a strand of hair back with deceptive tenderness. I flinched but didn't pull away, remembering my plan to appear compliant while I figured out what to do.
"Emma is in a better place," he continued. "She's serving an important purpose. And when this business deal is complete, we'll be set for life. We can have more children—a son to carry on the Prescott name."
"How can you say that?" I whispered, unable to maintain my facade. "She's our daughter, not some... commodity."
His eyes hardened. "Everything is a commodity, Diane. That's business. That's life. Your parents understand this. Why can't you?"
"Because I love her!"
"And I love our family legacy," he countered smoothly. "Which is why I made the necessary sacrifice to preserve it."
I stepped away from him, my back hitting the wall. "Tell me where she is. Please, Richard. I need to know she's safe."
Something flickered across his face—not guilt, but annoyance, as if my concern was an inconvenience.
"She's being well cared for," he said dismissively. "Now, I think it's time we focused on our future. On starting over."
He stepped closer, his intention suddenly clear in his eyes. My stomach twisted with revulsion.
"No," I said firmly, trying to move past him. "I don't want this. I want our daughter back."
Richard caught my wrist, his grip painfully tight. "What you want doesn't matter anymore, Diane. You've proven you can't be trusted with freedom or information. So now we do things my way."
I tried to pull away, but he was stronger. Much stronger. His other hand came up to my throat, not squeezing, just resting there—a threat, a reminder of his power.
"You're my wife," he said, his voice dropping to a whisper. "And it's time you remembered what that means."
What followed was a nightmare I couldn't escape. My protests meant nothing. My tears meant nothing. My body became just another possession for him to control, to punish, to remind me of my place in his world.
Afterward, he left me lying on our bed, staring at the ceiling. I felt hollow, a shell scraped empty of everything but pain and hatred.
"Clean yourself up," he said from the doorway, adjusting his cufflinks as if nothing unusual had happened. "We have dinner with the Hendersons tomorrow night. I expect you to be presentable."
The door closed behind him with a soft click.
I didn't move for hours. Couldn't move. The ceiling above me blurred and refocused as tears came and went. The beautiful bedroom that had once been my sanctuary now felt like a crime scene.
As night fell, a strange calm settled over me. Not peace—something colder, harder. I realized I was no longer crying. My mind had gone quiet, analytical.
I couldn't trust Richard. I couldn't trust my parents. I couldn't trust the authorities.
I was entirely alone.
Slowly, painfully, I forced myself to sit up. To stand. To walk to the bathroom on shaking legs. The woman in the mirror was a stranger—pale, hollow-eyed, with bruises blooming on her wrists and throat.
Dressed in a clean nightgown, I returned to the bedroom and retrieved my laptop from its hiding place in my closet. Richard hadn't thought to take it—he believed he'd broken me completely.
He was wrong.
I opened a private browser window and began to search. State Financial Officer + missing children. Corruption + child trafficking + state government. Westlake project + scandal.
At first, nothing concrete appeared. But as I refined my search terms, patterns emerged.
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