
Pregnant and Held Captive
Chapter 1
The cemetery stretched before me like a gray wound in the earth, rows of headstones standing sentinel under a sky that couldn't decide between rain and indifference. I clutched my mother's pendant so hard the metal bit into my palm, needing the pain to ground me, to prove this nightmare was real.
Black fabric swallowed the small gathering of mourners. I recognized some faces—distant relatives who'd surfaced for the spectacle, a few of Mother's bridge club friends dabbing at dry eyes. But something felt wrong. The whispers started as murmurs at the edges of my hearing, then grew louder, more urgent.
"—can't believe he'd do it today—"
"—wedding ceremony across town—"
"—that Presley Ray woman—"
The words hit me like physical blows. I turned toward Mrs. Patterson, Mother's oldest friend, who stood clutching her purse with white knuckles. "What are they talking about?"
Her eyes filled with something worse than pity. Horror, maybe. "Oh, Arabella, dear. You don't know?" She lowered her voice, but I heard every syllable with crystalline clarity. "Lucien is getting married. Right now. To Presley Ray. He scheduled the ceremony for today."
The pendant slipped from my fingers, dangling against my chest. Today. My mother's funeral. He'd chosen today.
"There must be some mistake." My voice sounded distant, not quite mine. "Lucien is my husband. We're married."
Mrs. Patterson's face crumpled. She opened her mouth, but whatever she meant to say died as a sleek black sedan pulled through the cemetery gates.
Lucien.
He stepped out wearing a charcoal suit that probably cost more than my mother's entire medical bills. No mourning black for him. Behind him emerged a man in an expensive suit carrying a leather briefcase—his lawyer, I realized with growing dread—and two security guards built like concrete walls.
He didn't even glance at Mother's casket waiting by the open grave. His eyes found me with cold precision.
"Arabella." My name in his mouth sounded like a business transaction. "I need your signature."
The funeral director stepped forward, flustered. "Sir, this is hardly the time—"
"Now." Lucien's voice cut through the air. He nodded to his lawyer, who produced papers with practiced efficiency.
I couldn't move. Couldn't breathe. The mourners formed a loose circle around us, shocked into silence.
"Divorce papers," Lucien said, as casually as if he were ordering coffee. "Sign them, and I'll return your mother's belongings. The photographs, her jewelry, everything I removed from the house."
He'd taken her things. While I was planning her funeral, he'd ransacked our home for leverage.
"You can't be serious." My voice cracked. "Today? At her funeral?"
Something flickered across his face—irritation, maybe, at my failure to cooperate quickly. "Our marriage was always temporary, Arabella. A business arrangement that's outlived its usefulness. Presley is my true love. She always has been. I'm simply correcting a mistake."
The words should have destroyed me. Perhaps they did. But standing there beside my mother's grave, I felt something else rising through the devastation. Something sharp and hot and utterly clarifying.
"You scheduled your wedding for today." I said it quietly, testing the reality of it. "For my mother's funeral."
"I'm a busy man. It was convenient." He thrust a pen toward me. "Sign, Arabella. Don't make this more difficult than it needs to be."
The priest clearing his throat broke through my paralysis. Mother's casket was being positioned over the grave. They were going to lower her into the ground, and my husband—my soon-to-be-ex-husband—was here with lawyers and security guards, forcing me to sign away our marriage while she descended into darkness.
My hand shook as I took the pen. Mrs. Patterson made a small sound of protest, but what choice did I have? Mother's photographs. Her wedding ring. The locket with my father's picture.
I signed. Each letter felt like surrender.
Lucien took the papers, barely glancing at them before handing them to his lawyer. "There. That wasn't so difficult." He actually smiled. "I'll have someone drop off your mother's things later this week. Maybe."
Rage crystallized in my chest, sharp as broken glass. The funeral director had started the prayer, but I couldn't hear it over the roaring in my ears. Lucien turned to leave, already dismissing me from his thoughts.
"I'm going to marry Elliott Dean."
The words erupted from somewhere deep and desperate. I barely recognized my own voice.
Lucien froze. Slowly, he turned back. "What did you just say?"
"Your uncle. Elliott Dean." I lifted my chin, even as my whole body trembled. "I'm going to marry him."
Laughter rippled through the gathering—nervous, shocked, disbelieving. Lucien's face darkened.
"Elliott disappeared five years ago. You've lost your mind."
"Have I?" I didn't know what I was doing, only that I needed to wound him the way he'd wounded me. Needed him to feel even a fraction of this humiliation.
The purr of an expensive engine cut through the tension. Every head turned as a black Rolls-Royce glided through the cemetery gates like a panther stalking prey.
It stopped beside Mother's grave. The driver's door opened.
Elliott Dean stepped out.
He was taller than I remembered, dressed in a suit so perfectly tailored it seemed painted onto his frame. Dark hair swept back from a face that could have been carved from marble—beautiful and severe and utterly commanding. His eyes found me first, holding my gaze with an intensity that stole my breath.
Then he smiled, slow and dangerous.
"Hello, nephew." His voice rolled through the cemetery like distant thunder. He crossed to me in three long strides, and before I could process what was happening, his arm wrapped around my waist, pulling me against his side. "I hope I'm not late. Had to deal with some business overseas."
Lucien's face had gone white. "Uncle Elliott. This is... unexpected."
"Is it?" Elliott's fingers splayed possessively against my hip. "Arabella told you, didn't she? She's mine now." He looked down at me, and something in his gaze made my heart stutter. "Isn't that right, wife?"
The word hung in the air like a thunderclap. Wife.
I should have denied it. Should have explained this was madness, a desperate lie. But Elliott's presence beside me felt like armor, and I was so tired of being defenseless.
"Yes," I whispered. "I'm his wife."
Elliott's smile sharpened into something that could draw blood. He turned that smile on Lucien, on the lawyer, on the security guards who'd taken an unconscious step backward.
"Now," he said softly, dangerously. "I believe you have some of my wife's property. Her mother's belongings. I suggest you return them. Immediately."
The cemetery had gone completely silent. Even the wind seemed to be holding its breath, waiting to see what would happen next.
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