The Gilded Cage Girl's Escape

The Gilded Cage Girl's Escape

Gavin

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I was Anderson Mathews' sugar baby, his pretty little thing. But when I saw him kiss his sister-in-law, Hope-his one true love-I knew I had to escape. I planned my exit meticulously, aiming to disappear the second my contract ended. I would become a scientist, find a kind, ordinary man, and build a life of my own. But Anderson wouldn't let go. He sabotaged the career of Caleb, the good man I' d fallen for, and used my estranged mother to publicly humiliate me, all to force me back into his gilded cage. "Marry me, Ayla," he proposed, a lifetime contract to replace the old one. "You'll be truly free. With me." My mother' s screams echoed in my ears: "She's a whore! Your whore! Dirty goods!" And Caleb, my Caleb, heard every word. I looked at Anderson's cold, possessive eyes, then at Caleb's, filled with a pain that shattered my heart. I had to make a choice. This time, I wouldn't just run. I would end this, once and for all.

Chapter 1

I was Anderson Mathews' sugar baby, his pretty little thing. But when I saw him kiss his sister-in-law, Hope-his one true love-I knew I had to escape.

I planned my exit meticulously, aiming to disappear the second my contract ended. I would become a scientist, find a kind, ordinary man, and build a life of my own.

But Anderson wouldn't let go. He sabotaged the career of Caleb, the good man I' d fallen for, and used my estranged mother to publicly humiliate me, all to force me back into his gilded cage.

"Marry me, Ayla," he proposed, a lifetime contract to replace the old one. "You'll be truly free. With me."

My mother' s screams echoed in my ears: "She's a whore! Your whore! Dirty goods!" And Caleb, my Caleb, heard every word.

I looked at Anderson's cold, possessive eyes, then at Caleb's, filled with a pain that shattered my heart. I had to make a choice.

This time, I wouldn't just run. I would end this, once and for all.

Chapter 1

Ayla Thompson POV:

Everyone knew what I was. Anderson Mathews' sugar baby. His gilded cage girl. His trophy. A pretty little thing he kept around.

I smiled when he wanted me to smile. I wore the dresses he picked. I nodded at the right times, laughed at the right jokes. My beauty was a performance, a silent language spoken for an audience that never truly saw me. To them, I was beautiful, obedient, and utterly, perfectly his. A doll with no strings that were visible to the naked eye.

They saw the diamonds, the designer clothes. They didn't see the tuition bills, the empty bank account, the eviction notice. They didn't see the desperation that gnawed at my stomach, the gnawing fear that had driven me to this glittering, suffocating prison. Columbia wasn't cheap, and my family had made sure I had nothing left.

He'd look right through me, even as his hand rested on my back at some charity gala. Then he'd look across the room at Hope, his sister-in-law, his 'one true love,' and a different light, a desperate yearning, would flicker in his eyes. I was just a substitute, a warm body, a convenient distraction. I endured his coldness, his public indifference, the subtle barbs from his inner circle. I endured it for Hope, the ghost who haunted our every interaction, the woman whose shadow I could never escape.

They all thought I'd end up alone, broken, clinging to the scraps of his wealth. A cautionary tale. Another forgotten face. They envisioned me drowning in the aftermath, lost without his gilded chains protecting me from the world. A beautiful toy, eventually tossed aside.

But they were wrong. I wasn't just surviving. I was planning my escape. And tonight, it all started. The timer was set.

My phone vibrated with a notification. A transfer from Anderson's account. Tuition paid. Another month secured. I closed the banking app, a stark reminder of the golden handcuffs I was still wearing. I clicked over to a messaging app. Kyle, my best friend, was already sending memes about final exams.

"Are you sure about this, Ayla?" Kyle's voice was tight with worry when I called her later. "He's not going to just let you walk away."

I leaned against the cold window pane of my luxurious, temporary apartment, watching the city lights blur. "He won't even notice at first, Kyle. I'm just a convenience. A pretty accessory." The words felt heavy, even though I'd repeated them a thousand times.

"Anderson Mathews doesn't 'not notice' things. Especially not things he considers his, Ayla. He's possessive, you know that." Kyle' s voice held a note of warning, a fear I understood all too well. Anderson saw me as an extension of his power, a beautiful object to be displayed, never questioned. He was a man who controlled everything and everyone in his orbit, a man whose presence filled a room even when he wasn't speaking. His coldness wasn't a lack of emotion; it was a weapon, honed and precise.

"He's obsessed with Hope. Not me." I forced a lightness into my tone, a lightness I didn't feel. "He'll be too distracted. His whole world revolves around her. You've seen it. We all have."

Kyle sighed. "Okay, when exactly are you making your grand exit?"

"The second my final contract ends. Not a day earlier, not a day later. I've calculated it all." My voice was firm, resolute. This wasn't a whim; it was a meticulously constructed plan. I had a new city picked out, a new name even, a fresh start where no one would know "Anderson Mathews' sugar baby." I was going to find a quiet job, maybe in a library, and fall in love with an ordinary man who saw me, truly saw me, for who I was inside. A simple life, honest and free. That was my only dream now.

Outside, the New York sky wept, a cold, insistent drizzle mirroring the chill that had settled deep in my bones. Rain always made things feel heavier, more dramatic. Like the city itself was mourning something, or warning of something to come. The forecast had said clear skies, but New York rarely listened to forecasts.

A glint of light caught my eye in the downpour below. A sleek, black car, its headlights cutting through the gloom, pulled up to the curb. My heart hitched. Anderson. He wasn't supposed to be back tonight. He was supposed to be with... her.

A strange tremor ran through me. Not fear, not exactly. More like a jolt of recognition, a familiar tightening in my chest that had nothing to do with him and everything to do with the role I played.

I watched him get out, tall and imposing even in the dim light. His outline was sharp, his movements precise. He was a silhouette of power against the backdrop of the city. He didn't look up, just walked briskly towards the entrance, his presence radiating an almost palpable coldness.

I took a deep breath, smoothing down my silk robe. Time to play the part. I opened the door, a practiced, soft smile on my lips. "Anderson, you're back early. I thought you had a late meeting." My voice was light, a subtle hint of playful complaint in it. I stepped forward, a hand reaching for his arm, a gentle, familiar gesture.

He didn't flinch, didn't soften. His eyes, dark and unreadable, met mine for a fleeting second, then darted past me. "I need you to run a bath for me, Ayla," he said, his voice flat, devoid of warmth. "And get that file from my desk. The red one."

As he moved past, a fresh scent hit me-expensive cologne mixed with something metallic. It wasn't until he turned slightly that I saw it: a faint bruise beginning to bloom on his jaw, almost hidden by his sharp stubble. A small cut, barely visible, traced the line of his temple. My breath caught. What had happened?

I swallowed, forcing my expression blank. "Of course, Anderson." I moved quickly, carefully, towards the bathroom, his coldness a familiar weight.

The scent of his cologne, a particular blend of cedar and something vaguely smoky, wafted from him. It wasn't a scent I loved, but it had become indelibly linked to him, to this life. It was the scent of power, of wealth, and of the cage I lived in. It brought a strange, unwelcome wave of déjà vu, dragging me back to another smell: the mildewy, cramped apartment I once called home.

The distant wail of a police siren cut through the city's hum, a sound that always pulled me back. It wasn't the sound itself, but the way it mixed with the rain, the way it used to filter through the thin walls of my childhood bedroom. That particular blend carried the weight of memory, a memory of a time when my world had been irrevocably shattered.

It was the summer after my senior year of high school. The acceptance letter from Columbia had come, a beacon of hope, a ticket out of a life I hated. But then my mother, Annette, had sat me down, her eyes wide with fake tears. "Your sister, Ayla, she needs this more than you. Her health... it's so fragile." My younger sister, always the fragile one, always the one my mother doted on, even when she was perfectly healthy. I knew it was a lie, a manipulation. My SAT scores had been tampered with, my application sabotaged. Years of resentment, years of being overlooked in favor of my sister, all culminating in this final, crushing blow.

My mother's voice, sickly sweet, still echoed in my ears. "You're so strong, Ayla. You can always try again next year. Think of your sister." It was never about my sister. It was about my mother's preference, her cruel favoritism, her twisted desire to keep me small, close by, and subservient.

My dreams of Columbia, of a scholarship, of a future I had worked so hard for, evaporated. The taunts from neighbors still stung: "Oh, Ayla, such a shame. I heard you failed your exams. Your sister, though, she's so delicate, she needs all the support she can get." Their pity was a fresh wound, a reminder of my public failure.

"You can't just give up, Ayla!" Kyle had raged, her loyalty fierce. "You can retake the SATs. We'll study together."

But my mother had cornered me again, her voice laced with the poison of emotional blackmail. "Don't you dare abandon us, Ayla. Your sister needs you. I need you. If you leave, I don't know what I'll do. We're a family, Ayla. You can't just throw that away."

I had felt the walls closing in, suffocating me. The fight had drained every ounce of my spirit. I had surrendered, my dreams crumbling to dust. I got a low-paying job, saving every penny, plotting my escape. It took two years, two years of scraping by, of enduring my mother's subtle cruelties and my sister's oblivious cheerfulness. Two years of feeling like a ghost in my own home.

When I finally had enough saved, I bought a one-way ticket, packed a single suitcase, and left a note. A short, emotionless goodbye. My mother's furious phone call had come days later, a torrent of curses and accusations. "Don't you ever come back, Ayla! You hear me? You're dead to me!" Her words, harsh as they were, were a kind of freedom.

But freedom in a new country, a new city, was brutal. I worked multiple jobs, studied relentlessly, finally scraping together enough for Columbia. But then a mugging, a violent, terrifying encounter that left me physically hurt and emotionally broken, stripped me of everything I had saved. All the money, gone. My resolve, shattered. I called my mother, a desperate plea for help. "I was robbed, Mom. I have nothing left."

Her voice was cold, distant. "That's what you get for abandoning your family, Ayla. This is God's punishment. Don't call me again." The line went dead.

That was the night I made my choice. My options were zero. Poverty, homelessness, or... this. I looked in the mirror, not at myself, but at the potential. The long dark hair, the sharp cheekbones, the kind of striking beauty that could be a currency. I spent weeks refining it, practicing smiles, learning the language of allure. I dyed my hair a deeper, richer black, chose clothes that accentuated my figure, transforming myself into a woman who could command attention.

I walked into a high-end charity auction, a place where wealth and power mingled. He was there, Anderson Mathews, a shadow of cold indifference in a room full of gilded smiles. He was talking to an older man, his expression unreadable, even as he commanded the conversation. I'd heard whispers about him, about his family, about his immense, untouchable wealth. And I knew, with a chilling certainty, that he was my only way out. He was my target.

I approached him, my heart hammering against my ribs, a cocktail glass firm in my hand. "Mr. Mathews?" My voice was soft, carefully modulated. He turned, his dark eyes sweeping over me, a flicker of something unreadable in their depths.

He barely spared me a glance. "Yes?" His tone was dismissive, colder than the ice in my glass.

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