
My Husband Tricked Me Into Saving His Mistress
Chapter 4
The combination to the wall safe was the date he claimed he found me. 10-14-16. Narcissism was Cyrus’s only vulnerability; he memorialized the day he acquired his pet.
Cyrus was downstairs, his voice a low rumble drifting up from the library where he was berating a junior executive. I had ten minutes. My hands shook, not with fear, but with a vibrating, electric rage as I spun the dial. The heavy steel door swung open. I reached for where my passport should have been, but my fingers brushed against a thick, manila envelope tucked in the back.
*The Young Family.*
I pulled it out. Inside wasn't money or deeds. It was letters. Dozens of them. The postmarks dated back five years.
*"Mr. Parker, we believe the girl in the society pages is our daughter, Novah. She has the scar on her palm. Please, we just want to know she’s safe."*
*"Mr. Parker, why won’t you let us speak to her?"*
*"Cease and Desist Order: Harassment of the Parker Estate."*
My knees hit the carpet. He hadn’t just stolen my kidney. He hadn't just stolen my dignity. He had stolen my family. For years, while I wept about being an orphan, crying into his shoulder, he had been shredding letters from parents who were desperately searching for me. A photo slipped out—a boy with kind eyes and a jawline that mirrored my own. On the back, in shaky handwriting: *Phoenix, waiting for his sister.*
I didn't cry. Tears were for the girl who believed in fairy tales. I was the woman who survived the slaughterhouse.
I shoved the papers into my waistband and grabbed a burner phone I’d swiped from a delivery driver yesterday. I dialed the number on the letterhead.
It rang once.
"Hello?" The voice was deep, weary.
"Phoenix?" My voice was a shards of glass. "It’s Novah. Get me out."
***
For three days, I became a ghost in my own skin.
I played the role Cyrus had written for me. The broken doll. The submissive wife. When he touched the fresh, angry ink of the *C.P.* brand on my hip, I didn't flinch. I let him trace the letters with his thumb, forcing my breathing to remain even while I mentally visualized shoving a letter opener into his throat.
"You're finally learning," he murmured over dinner the night before the escape, pouring me a glass of wine I wouldn’t drink. "I knew you’d settle down. You have nowhere else to go."
I smiled, a hollow curvature of lips. "Nowhere, Cyrus."
Every second was an agonizing performance. I had to suppress the urge to vomit when he kissed my cheek, had to lower my eyes when I wanted to claw his out. But the burner phone was taped beneath the vanity in the guest bathroom, and the plan was set.
***
The charity luncheon was my exit cue. I feigned a migraine, clutching my stomach—the scar tissue providing a convenient prop—and insisted he go ahead without me. The moment the limousine pulled away, I was moving.
I didn't take clothes. I didn't take jewels. I took only the dossier and the clothes on my back.
JFK Terminal 4 was a chaotic sea of bodies, but I moved with the singular focus of a bullet. I checked the departure board. *Seattle. Gate B32.*
I was fifty feet from the gate when the air pressure in the terminal seemed to drop.
"Novah!"
The shout didn't come from a lover; it came from a jailer.
I froze. Cyrus was sprinting toward me, flanked by two of his private security goons. He looked unhinged, his tie loose, his face a mask of purple fury. He must have tracked my phone. Or the car. It didn't matter.
"Don't you dare," he roared, closing the distance. He grabbed my arm, his fingers digging into the bruise he’d left days ago. "You think you can just walk away? You’re my wife!"
Travelers stopped. Phones went up. The court of public opinion was recording.
"I am not your wife!" I screamed, the sound ripping from the bottom of my lungs. I twisted in his grip, facing the crowd. "He stole my kidney! He forged the marriage certificate! He’s holding me hostage!"
"She’s mentally unstable!" Cyrus shouted over me, trying to drag me back toward the exit. He flashed a dazzling, practiced smile at a TSA agent. "She’s off her medication. I’m taking her home."
"Let her go."
The voice was new. It wasn't the smooth baritone of a liar. It was thunder.
A man stepped out from the gate area. He was tall, broad-shouldered, with eyes that burned with the same fire as mine. Phoenix.
Cyrus sneered, tightening his grip on me. "Who the hell are you? stay out of family business."
"That’s exactly what I’m doing."
Phoenix didn't hesitate. He didn't posture. He stepped into Cyrus’s space and drove his fist into Cyrus’s jaw with the force of a freight train.
The sound of bone meeting bone was sickeningly satisfying. Cyrus crumpled, his head snapping back, blood spraying onto the polished terrazzo floor. His security guards lunged, but airport police were already swarming, weapons drawn, shouting for everyone to get down.
"Run!" Phoenix grabbed my hand. His grip was firm, warm—nothing like the cold possession of the man bleeding on the floor.
We didn't look back at the chaos. We didn't look back at the monster scrambling to his feet, screaming my name like a curse. We bolted through the jet bridge, the closing doors of the aircraft sealing my past behind a wall of steel.
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