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The Night Our Love Died

For five years, she endured a humiliating marriage to billionaire lawyer Christopher Lutherson, all to secure his help for her framed father. However, Christopher suppressed vital evidence to satisfy his first love, leading to her father’s tragic suicide in prison. Now, as he arrogantly demands her presence at a party in exchange for legal aid, she has nothing left to lose. After signing the divorce papers, she prepares to leave the man who let her only family perish.
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Chapter 3

Natalie's Message

"Get the door, Natalie."

Christopher was met with nothing but silence. That was a reminder that I'd never come home.

Frustrated, he got out of bed to answer the door himself.

It was a courier, and he handed Christopher a hefty package. "Wedding anniversary package from a Ms. Shayman."

Christopher frowned upon hearing that.

He hauled the package into the house and sliced the tapes open with a box cutter. He expected scarves or handmade figurines, but none came out. Only the scent of mildew hit him.

The package housed piles of receipts, all neatly tied up.

Christopher scooped up the uppermost receipt. It had details about my blood extraction and dated back five years ago, on the 12th of October. I had 400ccs taken and was paid 30 dollars.

He froze for a moment, but he broke out of his reverie and went on reading. The receipts showed letters of consent that came from pharmaceutical companies regarding drug testing, underground blood selling, and more.

There were hundreds of them. Five full years' worth. Every single one of them was proof that I had risked my life over and over.

At the very bottom of the box lay a wrinkled letter. The handwriting was mine, albeit scrawling and hideous.

It read, 'You once told me, Christopher, that I married you just so I could live well. But during our entire marriage, I never received a single cent from you. You said room and board were more than enough, but my father was in prison. He needed toiletries. Clean clothes. Basic necessities. This was how I earned that money.'

Christopher's hands trembled. He'd seen the bruises on my arms when we were in bed once. "Did you catch some disease messing around out there? Don't come near me. I don't want to get infected."

Back then, I had said nothing. I had only lowered my head and silently pulled my sleeve down over the marks.

Christopher slammed the box closed as a storm brewed within him. "Very well, Natalie," he hissed and called his assistant right away.

"Freeze all of Natalie's cards right now! And make sure the whole city knows they'll be making an enemy out of me if they try to take Natalie's case!" He hung up right away, but something in his chest was aching to get out, yet it was stuck like glue.

His eyes drifted around the room, but they stopped at the porch. A pair of men's slippers sat on the ground. It was the pair he wore all the time.

There were holes where the soles once were, but someone had patched it up with soft rubber pads. They were soft on the soles and comfortable to wear.

Though the house had a dozen new slippers, this pair was the one he loved to wear. Christopher stared at them, irritation rising in his chest for reasons he refused to name.

Just then, Rachel called.

The moment he answered, her voice came through, shaky and upset. "I tried to apologize, but Natalie has deleted all her socials. It's impossible to reach her phone either. She's still angry at me!"

Christopher's heart sank. He quickly checked his socials, but my account was already deleted, and there was no profile picture at all. There was no trace of me on social media.

"Ignore her," he replied, but something in his throat felt tight. "She's trying to make me bow, but I assure you, she'll be at my firm in three days, begging for my help!"

Christopher hung up and scanned the empty mansion. His eyes returned to the patched slippers, and he sneered.

"I still hold your biggest weakness, Natalie. As long as your father is still in prison, you'll never escape me." Then, he straightened his tie and walked out of the house like a man convinced he still held all the power.

Unbeknownst to him, I was in a 50-square-foot basement hiding somewhere in the slums. Rainwater dripped from the ceiling. I sat by the tiny basement window, an urn of ashes resting in my arms—cold, solid, silent.

In one hand, I held half a piece of stale bread. I chewed mechanically, like a machine forcing itself to keep running.

I had no tears trailing down my face, nor did I have any emotions to show.

"Breakfast, Dad," I said softly to the urn.

Three days after leaving Christopher, I found work at a small company that handled specialized cleaning jobs.