Finding Freedom In A Small Town

Finding Freedom In A Small Town

Maiga Ardeni

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I was a billionaire's trophy wife, but when I fell ill, I had to beg my husband, Adam, for fifty dollars just to buy tampons. He refused, humiliating me for mismanaging my meager allowance. Minutes later, my phone lit up with photos of him on a yacht, gifting his ex-girlfriend a five-million-dollar necklace. The messages from other wives were brutal: "Poor Aubrey. Always second best." He had forbidden me from working, from having any independence, calling me an "ornament." I was a possession he'd bought, worth less than the jewelry he gave another woman. The humiliation burned hotter than any fever. He controlled my life, but he wouldn't control my escape. Standing drenched in the rain, I made a decision. If money was freedom, I would earn it myself. I pushed open the heavy door to The Velvet Lounge, a high-end club where secrets were sold and fortunes were made. My new life was about to begin.

Chapter 1

I was a billionaire's trophy wife, but when I fell ill, I had to beg my husband, Adam, for fifty dollars just to buy tampons.

He refused, humiliating me for mismanaging my meager allowance.

Minutes later, my phone lit up with photos of him on a yacht, gifting his ex-girlfriend a five-million-dollar necklace. The messages from other wives were brutal: "Poor Aubrey. Always second best."

He had forbidden me from working, from having any independence, calling me an "ornament." I was a possession he'd bought, worth less than the jewelry he gave another woman.

The humiliation burned hotter than any fever. He controlled my life, but he wouldn't control my escape.

Standing drenched in the rain, I made a decision. If money was freedom, I would earn it myself. I pushed open the heavy door to The Velvet Lounge, a high-end club where secrets were sold and fortunes were made. My new life was about to begin.

Chapter 1

My diamond wedding ring, a five-carat rock Adam had bought to signify his immense wealth, felt heavier on my finger than usual, a constant reminder of the gilded cage I lived in. It flashed under the harsh fluorescent lights of the Mercado Tower lobby, mocking the near-empty wallet tucked deep inside my designer bag.

"Aubrey, is there a problem?" Adam' s assistant, Mark, asked, his voice clipped.

I swallowed, the elegant marble floors suddenly feeling less like luxury and more like a cold, hard truth. My monthly allowance, a measly $500, had evaporated two weeks ago when I' d fallen ill and needed urgent medication. Now, even basic needs felt like an insurmountable hurdle.

"I... I need to see Adam for a moment," I managed, my voice barely a whisper. I hated asking. My stomach twisted.

Mark' s perfectly sculpted eyebrow arched. "Mrs. Mercado, Mr. Mercado is in a very important meeting."

"It won' t take long," I insisted, clutching my purse. "It' s urgent."

He sighed, a barely perceptible sound that still managed to convey his annoyance. "Wait here." He vanished behind the frosted glass doors of Adam' s executive suite.

The wait felt like an eternity. Every impeccably dressed person walking by seemed to see right through my facade, peering into the pathetic reality of my existence. Finally, Mark reappeared, a tight smile on his face. "He' ll see you now. Five minutes."

Adam sat behind his massive mahogany desk, bathed in the soft glow of his office lights, looking every bit the tech mogul he was. He didn't look up immediately. His eyes were fixed on the holographic display hovering above his desk, a complex array of stock market figures and data.

"Aubrey," he said, not a question, not a greeting, just an acknowledgment that I existed in his space. His voice was smooth, devoid of any warmth.

"Adam," I began, my hands clammy. "I... I need a little money."

He finally looked up, his gaze like surgical steel. "Your allowance was deposited on the first of the month. Did you mismanage it again?"

My cheeks burned. "No, I just... I got sick. The medication was expensive, and it took most of it. I need some for... necessities." I couldn' t bring myself to say it out loud. Not here. Not to him.

He leaned back in his chair, a smirk playing on his lips. "Necessities? You have everything you could ever want. You don' t work, Aubrey. What could you possibly need money for?"

A sharp, cold blade of indignation pierced through me. Work? I bit down on my tongue, tasting blood. He had forbidden me from working, from pursuing my passion for art restoration, from even volunteering at a local shelter, claiming it would "tarnish the Mercado name." Every attempt I' d made to earn my own keep, to have even a sliver of independence, had been met with his icy disapproval and, sometimes, far worse.

"I only need a small amount," I pleaded, pushing past the memory of his fury when he found me secretly selling a restored antique online. The punishment for that transgression still made me tremble. He' d cut off my allowance entirely for a month, forcing me to scavenge in the pantry for leftovers like a stray dog.

Adam' s expression hardened. "Working, Aubrey? Are you suggesting you' d go out and get a job? Do you know what that would do to my reputation? To our reputation?" He stood up, his height suddenly towering, menacing. "A Mercado wife does not work. She rests. She maintains appearances. She is an ornament, not a laborer."

He gestured to Mark, who had silently re-entered the room. "Mark, escorts Mrs. Mercado home. She needs to rest." His tone implied I was a child, or perhaps a pet that was misbehaving.

Mark approached, his hand lightly on my arm, guiding me towards the door. Humiliation burned through me, hotter than any fever. I walked out of that opulent office, my head held high, but inside, I was crumbling.

The sky outside mirrored my despair. Heavy, dark clouds hung low, and a cold, biting rain began to fall. I pulled my thin jacket tighter around me, wishing for the warmth of a taxi, a hot cup of coffee, something, anything, to make me feel less utterly alone. But my pockets were empty.

My phone buzzed. A notification from the "Elite Wives of Manhattan" group chat. I dreaded those messages, but curiosity, a morbid, self-destructive curiosity, always got the better of me.

My breath hitched. A flurry of photos, all of Adam. And Elenore Melton. His college sweetheart. The "one that got away." They were on a yacht, laughing, champagne flutes raised. The caption underneath: "Adam Mercado spares no expense for his one true love! A $5 million sapphire necklace for Elenore's birthday! True romance exists!"

My husband, the man who wouldn't give me $50 for tampons, had just dropped $5 million on his ex-girlfriend.

The messages poured in. "Poor Aubrey," wrote one. "Always second best." Another, "She knew what she was getting into. A trophy wife is just that-a trophy."

A trophy. A beautiful, silent object to be displayed, admired, and then, when the real prize appeared, discarded. I remembered my father' s beaming face on my wedding day, the hefty dowry Adam had paid, disguised as a "prenuptial agreement." I was bought. A transaction. And it felt like even a stray dog had more autonomy.

The rain turned into a torrential downpour, soaking through my clothes, chilling me to the bone. I walked blindly, the city lights blurring into streaks of color. My body was numb, but my mind was a whirlwind of pain and a growing, fierce resolve.

Another message flashed across my screen, this time a video of Adam kissing Elenore. His words echoed in my head: "Money doesn' t buy happiness, but it sure as hell buys freedom."

I stopped walking. I looked up, rain streaming down my face, mingling with my tears. I was completely drenched, standing in front of a neon sign that flickered through the downpour: "The Velvet Lounge." The "special place" I'd heard whispers about. A place where money wasn't just a means to an end, but the end itself.

My hands clenched into fists. I would find my freedom. And I would buy it myself.

I pushed open the heavy, ornate door.

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