
Phoenix Saves the Girl
Chapter 2
Light pierced through my eyelids like needles. My head throbbed with each heartbeat, a relentless drumbeat of pain. I tried to lift my hand to shield my eyes, but my arm felt like lead.
"Martin?" The name escaped my lips before I could stop it—the first word I always spoke upon waking.
A warm hand enveloped mine. "Eleanor, you're awake."
That voice. Not Martin's. Winston's.
I forced my eyes open, blinking against the harsh fluorescent lights. Winston sat beside my hospital bed, his normally impeccable appearance rumpled, dark circles under his eyes. He looked as though he hadn't slept in days.
"Welcome back," he said softly, his thumb tracing circles on my palm.
I tried to sit up but gasped as pain shot through my temple. "What happened?"
"You have a concussion and seven stitches." Winston gently pressed me back against the pillows. "Phoenix struck you with the champagne bottle at the gala. Do you remember?"
The memory flooded back—the humiliation, the rage, the sickening crack of glass against my skull. I touched the bandage gingerly. "How long have I been here?"
"Two days." Winston's voice was steady but his eyes betrayed his exhaustion. "I've been here the whole time."
Something twisted in my chest. "And Phoenix?"
Winston's hesitation told me everything. "He hasn't visited."
The words landed like a physical blow. I closed my eyes, feeling tears threaten. "Of course not."
"Eleanor—"
"He looks so much like him, Winston." My voice cracked. "But he's not Martin. He never was."
Winston squeezed my hand. For the first time since Martin's death, I didn't pull away from his touch.
---
Across town, Phoenix paced Natalia's sleek apartment like a caged animal. His hands trembled as he ran them through his hair.
"I can't believe I hit her," he muttered. "I never meant—"
"Of course you didn't," Natalia soothed, following him with her eyes. "It was an accident."
"She's going to ruin me," Phoenix said, stopping to glare out the window at the Manhattan skyline. "She owns half the city."
Natalia approached slowly, placing her hands on his shoulders. "She can't ruin you if you take control first."
"What do you mean?"
"Eleanor Hunt is vindictive," Natalia said, her voice dripping with false concern. "She's been using you, Phoenix. Don't you see? She made you dependent on her."
Phoenix's jaw tightened. "She's been... helpful."
"Helpful?" Natalia laughed softly. "She's been controlling you. Think about it—she's the one who got you the job at Richardson Group. She has access to all your personal information, your work product."
"So?"
"So what happens when she decides to lock you out?" Natalia's fingers traced his arm. "You need to protect yourself. Retrieve your files before she can use them against you."
Phoenix frowned. "That would be stealing."
"It's your intellectual property," Natalia insisted. "You're just... safeguarding it."
She could see the doubt in his eyes, so she played her trump card. "She provoked you, Phoenix. She's been harassing you for months. You were defending yourself."
The lie settled into his mind like a seed.
---
"Mommy, look what I built!" Jordan's excited voice pulled me from my thoughts.
I sat on the plush window seat of Winston's upstate estate, watching my daughter arrange wooden blocks on the Persian rug. The sunlight streaming through the windows caught her dark curls—so like Martin's—and for a moment, grief threatened to overwhelm me again.
But then Jordan laughed, a sound so pure and unaffected that it pierced through my melancholy.
"That's amazing, sweetheart," Winston said, settling beside her with a cup of tea for me. "Is it a castle?"
"A spaceship!" Jordan corrected indignantly. "See? This is where the aliens live."
Winston nodded seriously. "Fascinating. And where's the captain's quarters?"
Jordan giggled and pulled him down to show him her creation.
I watched them, something warm unfurling in my chest. When was the last time Jordan had laughed like that around Phoenix? When had she ever looked at him with such trust?
"Your daughter is remarkable," Winston said quietly, noticing my gaze.
"She's been staying with you?" I asked, taking the tea with shaking hands.
"For the past week." Winston's eyes met mine. "She needed stability after... everything."
I looked back at Jordan, who was now demonstrating how the spaceship's "laser cannons" worked. Her small face was animated, alive with joy.
This was what a family should be. Not the hollow imitation I'd been trying to create with Phoenix.
As if sensing my thoughts, Winston said gently, "You deserve this, Eleanor. Real happiness. Not shadows."
I turned away, unable to meet his gaze. Because for the first time since Martin died, I wondered if he might be right.
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