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Pregnant and Held Captive Novel Cover

Pregnant and Held Captive

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.
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Chapter 2

The Rolls-Royce moved through the city like a shadow, silent and predatory. I sat rigid against leather that probably cost more than everything I owned, acutely aware of Elliott's presence beside me. He hadn't spoken since we left the cemetery, but his hand rested on the seat between us—close enough that I could feel its heat, far enough to be almost respectful.

Almost.

"Where are we going?" My voice came out smaller than I intended.

"Home." He glanced at me, and something in his expression made my breath catch. "Your home now."

The mansion materialized from the twilight like something from a fever dream. Iron gates swung open without anyone touching them, revealing a sprawling estate that made Lucien's family home look like a cottage. Manicured gardens stretched into darkness, and the house itself rose three stories of pale stone and glowing windows.

Elliott opened my door before I could process that we'd stopped. He extended his hand, and I stared at it for a long moment—this point of no return. Everything that happened next would be real. Binding.

I took his hand.

He pulled me from the car with easy strength, and before I understood his intention, he'd swept me into his arms. I gasped, instinctively clutching his shoulders.

"What are you doing?"

"Carrying my wife across the threshold." His voice held dark amusement. "Isn't that the tradition?"

The word wife sent electricity down my spine. We weren't married. This was pretense, performance, revenge against Lucien. Wasn't it?

But Elliott carried me through those massive doors like I weighed nothing, like this was the most natural thing in the world. Staff materialized from shadows—a distinguished butler, two maids in crisp uniforms—all of them bowing slightly as we passed.

"Welcome home, Mr. Dean," the butler said smoothly. "And welcome, Mrs. Dean."

Mrs. Dean. The title felt foreign and right all at once.

Elliott didn't stop moving until we reached the second floor. He shouldered open a door, revealing a bedroom that stole what little breath I had left. Cream and gold fabrics, furniture that looked like it belonged in a museum, French doors opening onto a private balcony. The bed dominated the room—massive, draped in silk that caught the lamplight like water.

He set me down carefully, his hands lingering at my waist. "This is your room. Mine is connected through that door." He nodded toward an ornate door I hadn't noticed. "But it stays locked unless you open it."

The clarification should have relieved me. Instead, I felt strangely disappointed.

"I don't understand." I wrapped my arms around myself, suddenly cold. "Why are you doing this? You disappeared five years ago. You don't know me. I don't know you."

"Don't you?" He moved to a side table, poured amber liquid into crystal glasses. Whiskey, from the smell. He pressed one into my trembling hands. "I've been watching over you, Arabella. From a distance, yes, but I've seen your strength. Your grace. The way you held yourself together while your world crumbled."

The whiskey burned down my throat. "That's not an answer."

"No." He smiled, but it didn't reach his eyes. "It's not."

A soft knock interrupted us. The butler entered with a silver tray. "Chef has prepared Miss Arabella's favorites, sir. Tomato soup, grilled cheese, and apple pie."

I stared at the food. "How did you—"

"I told you. I've been watching." Elliott's voice softened. "You ate that meal every Sunday with your mother. Comfort food."

Tears burned my eyes. I'd forgotten that tradition myself until this moment—those quiet Sunday dinners, Mother and me at the kitchen table, the world reduced to simple flavors and conversation.

"I've also drawn you a bath," Elliott continued. "Lavender salts. I believe that's what you prefer?"

I couldn't speak. Could only nod.

"Eat. Bathe. Rest." He moved toward the connecting door, then paused. "And Arabella? You're safe here. Whatever else happens, remember that."

He left through the connecting door. I heard the quiet click of a lock—from his side, giving me control.

I ate mechanically, tasting nothing. The bath called to me, and I shed my funeral dress like a second skin, sinking into water that smelled like my mother's garden. The tears came then, finally, wracking sobs that I muffled against a towel.

When I emerged, wrapped in a robe softer than clouds, I found Elliott sitting in one of the bedroom chairs. My heart jumped.

"I knocked," he said quietly. "You didn't answer. I was concerned."

On the bed lay a wooden box I recognized. Mother's jewelry box. And beside it, photograph albums I thought were lost forever.

"Lucien gave these back?" I whispered.

"Eventually. After I made my position clear." Elliott's jaw tightened. "There are other things too. Items your father left. I've been... preserving them. Keeping them safe for when you'd need them."

I moved to the bed, hands shaking as I opened the jewelry box. Mother's pearls gleamed in the lamplight. Her wedding ring. The emerald brooch my father had given her on their anniversary.

"This isn't possible," I breathed. "Some of these things disappeared years ago, after Father died."

"I know." Elliott stood, crossed to me. "I knew what the Dean family was. What they were capable of. I couldn't stop everything, but I could preserve pieces of your history. Keep them safe until you needed them back."

I clutched Mother's pearls to my chest, and the dam broke completely. Sobs tore through me—for Mother, for Father, for every loss and betrayal and moment of absolute loneliness.

Elliott's arms came around me, solid and warm. He pulled me against his chest, one hand cradling my head while I shattered.

"I've got you," he murmured against my hair. "No one will hurt you again, Arabella. I promise you that."

I tilted my face up, needing to see if he meant it. His eyes were dark, intense, filled with something that made my pulse stumble. The space between us crackled with sudden heat.

"Elliott," I whispered, not sure what I was asking.

His thumb traced my cheekbone, wiping away tears. "You've been so strong for so long. You don't have to be strong here."

The kindness nearly destroyed me. I rose on my toes, closing the distance, and pressed my lips to his.

He froze for one heartbeat. Then his control shattered, and he kissed me back with an intensity that stole my breath and remade the world.

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