
When He Erased My Birthmark to Claim Me
Chapter 3
The early morning sun cast long shadows across Union Square as I set up my makeshift art display on a park bench. Three charcoal sketches—faces twisted in silent screams, eyes hollow with grief—were all I had to show for a week of freedom. Freedom that felt more like free fall.
I'd been in San Francisco for seven days. Seven days of serving coffee at Moonbean Café, walking strangers' dogs, and sleeping on a shelter cot that smelled faintly of industrial cleaner. Seven days of looking over my shoulder, certain that Alexander's reach would find me even here.
A young couple paused to look at my drawings, whispered to each other, then moved on without a word. I tried not to let disappointment settle in my chest. The twenty dollars I'd made from my first sketch was long gone, spent on food and charcoal pencils.
"These are remarkable."
The voice came from behind me, deep and vaguely familiar. I tensed instinctively, my body conditioned to expect danger from male voices. When I turned, the world seemed to tilt beneath me.
"Lucas?" The name escaped my lips before I could stop it.
Lucas Morgan—my childhood friend, the boy who'd taught me to skip stones across the lake in Central Park—stood before me, though he was a boy no longer. His dark hair was shorter than I remembered, his jawline sharper, but his eyes were the same warm brown that had once made me feel safe.
"Evelyn Carter." He spoke my name like a prayer, disbelief etched across his features. "My God, is it really you?"
I shrank back, suddenly aware of my worn clothes, my unwashed hair, the dust and dread that must have been visible under my eyes. "How did you—"
"I didn't," he assured me quickly, hands raised as if to show he meant no harm. "I was heading to a meeting and saw your sketches. I'd know your style anywhere."
His gaze dropped to my drawings, and something in his expression shifted. "These are... different from what you used to create."
Different. Yes. Once I'd drawn sunsets and laughing children. Now my art was all shadows and sorrow.
"I'll take all three," Lucas said, already reaching for his wallet. "And any others you have."
"You don't have to do that," I whispered, shame burning my cheeks. Was this pity? Charity for the fallen heiress?
"I'm not doing you a favor, Evelyn." His voice was firm. "I own a gallery three blocks from here. These belong on a wall, not a park bench."
The mention of a gallery sparked something in me—a flicker of the girl I'd been before Alexander, before my father's disgrace. Before I became someone's songbird.
"Let me buy you coffee," Lucas offered. "Just to catch up. No pressure."
Every instinct honed by three years with Alexander screamed danger. But this was Lucas—the boy who'd held my hand at my mother's funeral, who'd never treated me differently even when my family name opened doors.
"One coffee," I agreed, gathering my sketches with trembling hands.
At a nearby café—not Moonbean, thankfully—Lucas ordered for both of us without asking what I wanted. For a moment, panic flared in my chest, the echo of Alexander's control. But then Lucas turned to me and said, "Still take it with two sugars, right? Or has that changed too?"
The simple acknowledgment that I might have preferences, might have changed, nearly undid me.
Over steaming mugs, Lucas told me about his gallery, his journey from art student to owner. He asked no questions about where I'd been, though curiosity burned in his eyes.
"I have a spare room," he said finally, as our cups emptied. "Above the gallery. And I need a part-time assistant."
I stiffened. "I don't need charity."
"It's not charity, it's practicality. The room's sitting empty, and I need help." His eyes met mine. "No strings, Evelyn. You can leave anytime."
Leave anytime. Three words Alexander had never offered.
That night, in Lucas's spare room with its clean sheets and door that locked from the inside, I fell into the first real sleep I'd had since fleeing New York. But the nightmares found me anyway—Alexander chasing me through endless corridors, his voice echoing: "My songbird, where are you hiding?"
I bolted upright, a scream trapped in my throat. Moments later, a soft knock came at my door.
"Evelyn?" Lucas's voice, gentle with concern. "I've made chamomile tea."
I opened the door a crack, heart still racing. Lucas stood in the hallway, a steaming mug in his hands, respectfully distant.
"Bad dreams?" he asked, offering the tea without stepping closer.
I nodded, accepting the warm mug. "Thank you."
"You're safe here," he said simply, and turned to go.
As I watched him walk away, not demanding entry, not requiring gratitude, something fragile and forgotten stirred in my chest.
Hope, perhaps. Or the first breath of trust.
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