
The Price Of Loving Mr Damien
Chapter 4
Arielle exited the courthouse. Her heels clicked against the pavement, echoing too loudly in the near-empty parking lot.
She checked her phone for what felt like the hundredth time. 7:42 p.m., and her heart sank.
She was supposed to pick Liam up at six. He would be waiting, probably still wearing that little cape he had made from an old blanket, waiting for superhero training.
“Damn it,” she muttered and broke into a brisk walk.
Her briefcase was heavy and her steps grew faster. Guilt pressed harder with every second. She could already see his disappointed face and hear the tiny, wounded voice: You promised, Mommy.
Headlights washed the pavement and slowed to match her pace.
She did not have to look to know who it was. That car. That voice.
“Arielle.”
His name slipped out as if it still belonged there.
She stopped and turned slowly.
Damien Blackwood leaned from behind the wheel of his dark Aston Martin, sleeves rolled, tie loosened. He looked infuriatingly composed, as if the years had not touched him.
“Still walking home alone at night?” he asked, a small smile at his mouth.
She crossed her arms. “Still stalking women outside courthouses?”
He draped an arm over the steering wheel, unbothered. “I just wanted to see the competition up close.”
“Then you have seen enough,” she said and started walking again. Her heels clicked, sharp and deliberate. The car eased alongside her.
“Come on, Arielle. It is late. Let me drop you off,” Damien said. His tone softened in that way it always did when he wanted something.
“Do not bother,” she said without turning. “I will take a cab.”
He pulled the car over and killed the engine. The Aston Martin’s door opened with a soft pop.
“Arielle, do not be ridiculous,” he said, closer now, voice low and commanding.
She kept walking, back rigid. She felt him close behind her.
“Leave me alone,” she replied.
“I just want to make sure you get home safe,” he insisted and reached out. The sound of his leather soles on the pavement closed the space between them.
His hand found her shoulder, the old possessive gesture that had once disarmed her. He meant to turn her, to cradle her face.
She felt the old tension, the memory of it, but she was not the same woman anymore.
Before his fingers touched her jacket, she spun, hand dipping into her blazer pocket.
“Don’t touch me,” she hissed.
A hiss answered her command as the pepper spray shot a burst of orange mist straight into his face. Damien staggered back, hands flying to his eyes, coughing violently.
“What the—Arielle! My eyes!” he gasped, voice breaking. Tears streamed down his face, his composure crumbling.
Arielle planted her heels and did not flinch. The cold satisfaction that tightened her chest surprised her.
“That,” she said, voice low and unshakable, “is for thinking you could ever touch me again. For believing you still had a place in my life and not nearly enough for all the hurt you caused me.”
He bent over, leaning against the car, desperate to clear his eyes, struggling to breathe.
Arielle stepped closer, her shadow falling over him.
“Listen carefully, Damien. That life, that history, that access is over. Not in my life, not here. You do not get to come back.”
She tightened her grip on the briefcase and felt adrenaline sharpen her.
“Get ready,” she said, calm and hard. “I am going to take Blackwood Industries down. Tell your lawyers to stay awake. You will lose everything you hide behind.”
He managed a pained whisper. “Arielle… I never meant—”
“Save it,” she said. “You meant every bit of it.”
She turned and walked away, her heels striking the pavement in a steady, methodical rhythm. Behind her he continued to cough, bent over and blind, a smudge of orange on his cheek.
Arielle didn’t look back. She walked quickly, her mind on one thing: Liam.
By the time she reached the daycare, it was nearly 8:05 p.m. The door opened, and Mrs. Hargrove, the owner, was waiting, arms crossed.
“Ms. West,” she said, voice firm but not unkind. “It’s past closing. You really should’ve picked him up on time.”
“I know, I know,” Arielle said, cheeks warming. “I… I’m so sorry. Traffic—work—it got away from me.”
Mrs. Hargrove’s expression softened a little. “He’s fine. Just worried, that’s all. He’s been asking about you every hour.”
Arielle’s heart squeezed. “Thank you for keeping him safe.”
She hurried inside and there he was, sitting on the curb in the little blanket cape he’d made himself.
“Liam,” she breathed, relief washing over her.
“Mommy!” he ran into her arms. She scooped him up, hugging him tight.
“I’m so sorry, baby. I should’ve been here earlier.”
“It’s okay,” he mumbled. “I knew you’d come.”
She smiled, brushing dirt from his cheek. “Still wearing your superhero cape, huh?”
“I was practicing flying,” he said proudly.
“And did you fly?”
“I fell,” he admitted, a small frown tugging at his forehead.
Her lips curved. “That’s why you need a sidekick.”
“Lucky for you, your sidekick is here now.”
“Always,” she said, scooping him up once more. “Now, let’s get going. Superhero training waits for no one.”
Liam giggled, resting his head against her shoulder. “Best day ever.”
Arielle smiled, brushing a stray curl from his face. As they walked out together, her mind was already planning the next steps, not just for Liam, but for the war she was about to wage in court.
Later that night, after dinner, Liam barely made it halfway through his favorite cartoon before his eyelids fluttered shut.
He’d eaten, yawned, and knocked out instantly, the little blanket cape still tied around his neck.
Her throat tightened. Tears blurred her vision.
She tried to hold them back.
Failed.
Arielle pressed a hand to her mouth, but the first sob tore out of her anyway. Her knees buckled, and she sank to the floor beside his bed, one hand gripping the edge of the mattress as if it were the only thing keeping her upright.
Silent at first.
Then sharp.
Then completely out of her control.
Her shoulders shook, her breath caught, and the tears came painfully, falling onto the hardwood like pieces of her breaking one by one.
Everything she had been holding together all day: the pressure in court, the years of betrayal, Damien stepping out of that car like nothing had happened, the anger that surged when she sprayed him, the sick guilt of being late for Liam crashed into her all at once.
“God… I’m trying,” she whispered, voice thin and cracked. “I’m really trying.”
She lifted her eyes to her son… peaceful, innocent, the only soft place she had left and her chest tore open again.
She scrubbed her face with trembling hands, trying to steady her breathing, trying not to wake him. He didn’t deserve to see her like this. He didn’t deserve any of this weight.
Arielle leaned her forehead against the mattress, letting the ache run its course until the sobs softened into shaky breaths.
When she finally lifted her head, her eyes were still wet but steady.
A different kind of fire burned behind them… cold, focused, merciless.
She swallowed hard, anger rising through the cracks of her heartbreak.
“How dare you,” she whispered into the quiet room, her voice trembling with rage. “How dare you talk to me like nothing happened. Like you didn’t break me. Like the last five years didn’t happen.”
Her hand curled into a fist against the mattress.
“I walked away to protect myself… to give my son a peaceful life. That was all I wanted. A quiet, simple life. Far away from you.”
Her breath shook.
She wiped her face again, slower this time.
“But now?” A bitter laugh slipped out. It was soft, hollow, dangerous. “Now you show up like you still have rights to me. Like you still matter. Like you can just… walk back into the life you destroyed.”
She stood, her silhouette framed by the soft glow of the night-light, her voice dropping to a whisper that felt like a vow:
“Damien Blackwood,” she breathed, every word deliberate,
“I’m going to destroy you. Completely.”
She didn’t raise her voice.
She didn’t need to.
The silence itself trembled.
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