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The Cage Of Their Perfect Lie

The Cage Of Their Perfect Lie

My husband, Grayson Daugherty, threw me out of his car in the pouring rain to rush to another woman's side. That was the night I learned our marriage was a lie, a carefully constructed cage to protect his real love. But the deception ran deeper than I could have imagined. When I tried to leave, my own family betrayed me, beating me until I bled just to keep their precious business alliance intact. My life's work, my photography, was stolen by his mistress, Kennedy, and he locked me in a dark basement, using my deepest childhood trauma as a weapon to force my silence. I was just a pawn, a shield, a sacrifice on the altar of their epic love. Stripped of my family, my art, and my heart, I finally understood. If they wanted a storm, I would become a hurricane. I burned our penthouse to the ground and walked away, ready to destroy the man who broke me. But I never expected him to follow me to the ends of the earth, ready to die just to prove his love was real.
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Chapter 8

Addison POV: "It wasn't like that," Grayson said, his voice still maddeningly calm. "Her gallery's opening was approaching, and she had a... creative block. A disk drive with her own work was corrupted. She was panicking." "A creative block?" I repeated, my voice rising to a hysterical shriek. "So you gave her my life's work to 'borrow'?" The word was a venomous insult on my tongue. "You stole my photographs, my soul, and you gave them to her to hang on a wall and call her own!" "I will compensate you," he said, as if discussing a business transaction. "Name your price, Addison. A gallery of your own. A multi-million dollar arts fund in your name. Anything you want." I stared at him, speechless. He thought he could buy my soul? He thought my art, the very essence of who I was, had a price tag? "You can't buy it back, Grayson," I snarled. "You can't put a price on this." I made a move to push past him, my eyes set on the door. "I'm going to that gallery, and I'm going to tell the world that your precious Kennedy is a fraud and a thief." "No," he said, his voice suddenly like ice. He grabbed my wrist, his grip so tight I cried out. "You will not." We struggled, a frantic, desperate dance of fury and control. He was stronger, his body an unyielding wall. I twisted, trying to break free, my foot slipping on the polished floor. I fell. The world tilted, and I was tumbling backward, down the grand, sweeping staircase of our penthouse. I landed at the bottom in a heap, a sharp, searing pain shooting through my ankle. Grayson's face went white. For the first time, I saw genuine, unadulterated panic in his eyes. He was down the stairs in a flash, kneeling beside me, his hands hovering, afraid to touch. "Addison," he breathed, his voice tight with a fear that was almost believable. He checked my ankle, his touch surprisingly gentle. "It's not broken, just sprained," he pronounced, his CEO-like assessment returning. He didn't call an ambulance. He wouldn't want a public record. He scooped me up and carried me to the sofa. "Get the doctor," he barked at a terrified-looking maid. Then he turned to another. "Mrs. Daugherty is not to leave this house. Under any circumstances." He was imprisoning me. For her. To protect her reputation, he was locking me in this gilded cage. The private doctor came and went, wrapping my ankle and leaving me with a bottle of painkillers. The entire time, Grayson stood over me, a silent, imposing guard. When the doctor left, he knelt beside me. He held out his arm, the sleeve of his expensive shirt rolled up to reveal his strong, pale forearm. "Go on," he said, his voice soft. "Bite me. Hit me. Whatever you need to do. Get it out." I stared at his arm, and then at his face. He was offering me a release, a physical target for my rage, so that he could then move on to the next step of his damage control. I lunged forward and sank my teeth into his flesh, biting down with all the fury and heartbreak in my soul. I tasted blood. He didn't even flinch, just closed his eyes and absorbed the pain. When I finally let go, he was bleeding. He looked at the wound dispassionately, then reached into his jacket and pulled out his wallet. He extracted a black, Centurion card and placed it on the table in front of me. "For your pain and suffering," he said, his voice flat. I just laughed, a broken, empty sound. "You think you can fix this with money? She's a thief, Grayson. And the art world is smaller than you think. My style is recognizable. People will know." As if on cue, his assistant, a perpetually nervous young man named Leo, rushed in, holding a tablet. "Sir, there's a problem. The exhibition... there's a massive online outcry. Dozens of critics and photographers are pointing out the similarities between Ms. Dillard's work and... and Mrs. Daugherty's published photos. They're calling it plagiarism." Grayson's jaw tightened. He shot me a furious, accusatory look. "Did you do this? Did you leak this?" "I didn't have to," I said, a grim satisfaction blooming in my chest. "My work speaks for itself. Unlike your little protege's." Leo, looking terrified, added, "Sir, they're right. Mrs. Daugherty's signature use of light and shadow is... unmistakable. It's her artistic fingerprint." Grayson shot Leo a look so cold it could have frozen fire. Leo visibly shrank. "I need you to fix this, Addison," Grayson said, his voice dangerously low. He turned to me, his eyes hard as stone. "You will log into your public account, and you will issue a statement. You will say you and Kennedy are collaborators. That you mentored her. That you gave her permission to use the photos." I stared at him, aghast. "You want me to lie for her? To sacrifice my own artistic integrity to save hers?" "I will not allow her reputation to be ruined," he stated, as if it were a fact of nature, like gravity. "No," I said, the word a final, unbreakable vow. "I will not." His face, which had been a mask of cold control, hardened into something terrifying. The temperature in the room plummeted. "Then you leave me no choice," he said, his voice a chilling whisper. He turned to his guards. "Take her to the storage room in the basement. Lock her in." My blood ran cold. The storage room. It was a small, windowless space, completely dark. When I was a child, my father used to lock me in a dark closet as punishment. I had a deep, primal fear of the dark, of enclosed spaces. Grayson knew this. I'd told him once, in a rare moment of vulnerability, my voice trembling as I recounted the childhood trauma. He was using my deepest fear, my most intimate wound, as a weapon against me. To protect her. The guards grabbed my arms. I looked at Grayson, my eyes pleading. This was a cruelty beyond anything he had done before. This was not just manipulation; it was torture. He wouldn't meet my gaze. He just stood there, a marble statue of a man, as his guards dragged me, kicking and screaming, toward the darkness. ---