When His Love Became My Torture

When His Love Became My Torture

Little Pink Lace

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For five years after an accident stole his memory, my husband Ethan treated me like a ghost. He flaunted his affair with his mistress, Kasey, while I endured their daily cruelty, hoping the man I loved would return. My escape was planned to the last detail, a contract that would give me back our gallery and my freedom. But they found out. Kasey framed me for hurting her children, then had them spray acid on my hands. Ethan, consumed by her lies, dragged me to a museum for his final, brutal act of punishment. He had my mouth, eyes, and ears sewn shut. Then he hung me upside down for the world to see. He thought he had broken me. But he didn't know about the hidden cameras. Or the powerful family I had kept secret. They left me for dead, but they only started a war.

Chapter 1

For five years after an accident stole his memory, my husband Ethan treated me like a ghost. He flaunted his affair with his mistress, Kasey, while I endured their daily cruelty, hoping the man I loved would return.

My escape was planned to the last detail, a contract that would give me back our gallery and my freedom. But they found out.

Kasey framed me for hurting her children, then had them spray acid on my hands.

Ethan, consumed by her lies, dragged me to a museum for his final, brutal act of punishment.

He had my mouth, eyes, and ears sewn shut. Then he hung me upside down for the world to see. He thought he had broken me.

But he didn't know about the hidden cameras. Or the powerful family I had kept secret.

They left me for dead, but they only started a war.

Chapter 1

Addison Anderson POV:

The scent of his cheap cologne, cloying and unfamiliar, clung to Kasey's hair as Ethan stroked it. My breath hitched. Five years. Five years since the accident stole him from me, leaving a cruel stranger in his place. A man who sat across the gallery, openly displaying his affection for another woman, while I, his wife, watched. My heart, a withered thing, still beat with a phantom pain of what we once were.

Ethan' s laugh echoed, a hollow sound that grated against my nerves. Kasey, her eyes gleaming with triumph, leaned into him, a possessive hand on his arm. This scene was a tableau I had grown accustomed to, a daily brutality delivered with careless ease. It felt like watching my own funeral, day after day, year after year.

I adjusted the lapel of my blazer, the fabric suddenly feeling too tight, too constricting. My smile, practiced and brittle, remained fixed as a potential buyer approached. This gallery, once our shared dream, was now my cage. I was Addison Anderson, renowned art gallery owner, and I had a job to do. My reputation, my family' s legacy, depended on it. Resilience, my father used to say, was the Anderson birthright.

"Another piece from the new collection, Mr. Davies?" I asked, my voice steady, betraying none of the turmoil churning inside me.

I guided him toward a large abstract piece, explaining its nuances, the artist' s vision, the investment potential. My words flowed, professional and confident, a stark contrast to the trembling mess I felt on the inside. This was my sanctuary, my battleground.

A shadow fell over me. Ethan. He stood beside me, not to support, but to dismiss. His eyes, once full of warmth for me, were now pools of cold disdain.

"Still peddling these mediocre talents, Addison?" His voice was a low sneer, meant only for my ears. "I thought you' d have graduated to something with actual merit by now. Or perhaps your taste has devolved alongside your... other qualities."

The words struck me like a physical blow. A cold dread settled deep in my stomach. I felt my face flush, but I forced my expression to remain neutral. Mr. Davies shifted uncomfortably, sensing the tension.

Kasey, never one to miss an opportunity, sauntered closer, her smile sickly sweet. "Oh, Ethan, don' t be so harsh. Addison tries her best, I' m sure." Her gaze flickered to me, a flash of malice in her polished eyes. "It' s just hard to keep up with truly innovative artists, isn' t it, darling?"

She glanced at the painting I was presenting, then at a vibrant, chaotic piece of her own hanging prominently. It was strategically placed, of course, a constant reminder of her encroaching presence.

"My latest work, 'Eternal Flame,' has been quite the topic of conversation," Kasey purred, addressing Mr. Davies directly, effectively hijacking my client. "Ethan says it perfectly captures the passion of our newest artistic movement."

My jaw tightened. She was a master of self-promotion, selling hype over substance. Her art was flashy, superficial, devoid of genuine emotion, much like Kasey herself. She valued public adoration above all else.

A discreet buzz vibrated in my pocket. My phone. I excused myself, pretending to check a notification. My fingers trembled slightly as I palmed the device, quickly scanning the encrypted message. Contract confirmed. Ready for signing.

A surge of adrenaline, cold and sharp, shot through me. This was it.

I caught Ethan' s eye as I returned. He was watching me, a flicker of suspicion in his gaze. It was quick, gone almost before I registered it, but it was there. He knew me too well, even this broken version of him. Had he seen something in my eyes? A flicker of defiance?

"Ethan, darling," I said, my voice sweet, a veneer of normalcy I barely managed to maintain. "I have some papers for your signature. Just routine acquisition documents for the new quarter. You know, the ones your lawyers usually send over."

He eyed me, then the folder I held out. His lips curled. "More of your administrative busywork? Can't it wait?"

"It's pressing, Ethan," I insisted, maintaining eye contact. "Legal deadlines, you understand. Wouldn't want our joint ventures to suffer, would we?"

He snorted, a sound of pure arrogance. "Fine. Get it over with." He snatched the pen from my hand, his movements impatient, dismissive. He didn't even glance at the document before scribbling his name, his signature bold and sprawling. The irony was a bitter taste in my mouth. He was signing away his future, not mine. He thought it was just another piece of paper, another inconsequential detail handled by his inconvenient wife.

A secret, exhilarating thrill coursed through me. It was done. The gallery, our gallery, was mine. He had signed over his controlling interest, disguised as a mundane art acquisition contract. The legal team had been meticulous.

He tossed the pen back onto the table, a clatter that jarred my already frayed nerves. "Happy now, Addison? Always something, isn't it? Running this place into the ground with your 'vision'." He gestured around the elegant space, his eyes filled with contempt. "This place is a relic. A museum, not a gallery. Kasey's work breathes life into dead spaces."

Kasey, emboldened, sidled up to Ethan, pressing her body against his. She kissed his cheek, her eyes fixed on me, a taunt in their depths. "Don't worry, Ethan. We'll soon revitalize everything. Won't we, darling?"

A wave of nausea hit me, hot and sickening. My head swam. The air felt thick, heavy with their blatant disrespect, their sickening affection. My stomach churned, a knot of revulsion tightening in my gut. I gripped the signed document, the crisp paper a tangible symbol of my imminent freedom, and the cost.

As I turned to leave, Ethan reached out, grabbing my wrist. His touch, once gentle, was now a vice. It sent a shiver of dread through me.

"Where do you think you're going?" he snarled, his eyes narrowing. "Don't you have something to say? Some gratitude for my... generosity?"

His grip tightened, his fingernails digging into my skin. I winced, a sharp pain shooting up my arm.

"Let go, Ethan," I whispered, my voice barely audible.

His eyes flared, a dark, primal rage erupting. "Let go? After everything? After you've manipulated and schemed your way through my life?"

He shoved me then, hard. My head snapped back, hitting the edge of a nearby display pedestal with a sickening thud. Stars exploded behind my eyes, and a searing pain erupted at the base of my skull. I cried out, a guttural sound of shock and agony, clutching my head. My vision blurred.

He towered over me, his face contorted with fury, utterly devoid of remorse. "Don't make a sound, you pathetic creature," he hissed, his voice dangerously low. "You think a few tears will make me forget your deceit?" His eyes, once so tender, now held nothing but cold contempt.

This wasn't the first time. The bruises, the whispered threats, the emotional lacerations – they were a tapestry woven into the fabric of my life these past five years. I had endured it all, clinging to the ghost of the man he once was, hoping, praying, for his memory to return. But that man was gone. Replaced by this monster.

I pushed myself up, my head throbbing, a metallic taste in my mouth. My vision cleared just enough to see Kasey watching, a smirk playing on her lips. She didn't flinch. She probably enjoyed the show.

"I need to go," I managed, clutching the signed contract like a lifeline. I had to get out. Before I broke completely.

Ethan' s eyes narrowed. He probably noticed the frantic urgency in my voice, the way my hands trembled. "So eager to run away, are we?" he challenged, his voice dripping with malice. "Trying to escape the consequences of your own actions, Addison?"

"I am merely fulfilling my duties here," I said, forcing a professional tone, pushing down the rising panic. "The gallery requires my attention. Unlike some, I still have responsibilities."

He laughed, a harsh, humorless sound. "Responsibilities? You mean obligations, don't you, Addy?" His use of the old nickname, the one he used in our happiest moments, was a cruel twist of the knife. Each syllable scraped against my raw nerves, ripping open old wounds. My breath caught in my throat. I felt a tremor run through my body, a desperate urge to clamp my hands over my ears, to block out the searing pain of that name on his lips.

I turned to leave, needing to escape, needing air. Needing to breathe without the suffocating weight of his presence.

But Kasey, sensing my desperation, stepped into my path. Her eyes, filled with a predatory glee, sparkled. "Oh, Addison, don't rush off just yet. There's something I need your expert opinion on." She held up a small, exquisitely carved wooden bird, a delicate piece of art. "This is for Ethan's office. Do you think it fits his minimalist aesthetic, or is it too... sentimental?"

The bird was a replica of one Ethan had carved for me on our first anniversary. My stomach clenched, bile rising in my throat. This was a deliberate, calculated torment.

Humiliation burned through me, hotter than anger. I felt my face flush, my hands clenching into fists. The urge to scream, to lash out, was almost unbearable. But I couldn't. Not yet.

Ethan watched me, a cold smile playing on his lips. "Well, Addison? The expert opinion, please. Kasey values your... insights." His tone was a whip, lashing out, demanding my compliance, my utter capitulation.

My hands trembled as I took the bird from Kasey. The small, familiar carving felt impossibly heavy in my palm. My fingers brushed against the smooth wood, a ghost of memory, a whisper of a time when love was real. A tear, hot and traitorous, pricked at the corner of my eye. I fought it back.

"It's... exquisite," I choked out, the word tasting like ashes. My voice was hoarse, strained. I hated the sound of my own surrender. I felt exposed, vulnerable, a puppet on their strings.

Ethan's eyes, dark and knowing, lingered on me. He saw my pain, my humiliation. And he reveled in it. A flicker of something predatory, almost satisfied, crossed his face. He leaned closer to Kasey, whispering something in her ear, his gaze still fixed on me, a silent threat.

A sudden, sharp twist of agony bloomed in my stomach. Was he laughing at me? Or worse, was he still trying to read me? A cold sweat broke out on my forehead. I felt a tremor run through my body. The signed papers in my hand felt like a dangerous secret, a fragile shield.

"Addison," Kasey' s voice cut through my thoughts, sickly sweet. "Since you're so good with details, perhaps you could re-arrange the display for my new collection? The lighting could be... more dramatic, don't you think?" It was an order, disguised as a request, a demand for me to serve her.

My eyes snapped to hers, a silent battle raging within me. My hands, still clutching the small wooden bird, tightened. The urge to smash it, to scream, was almost overwhelming.

Ethan cleared his throat. "Good idea, Kasey. Addison certainly has an eye for presentation, even if her own art sense is lacking. Get to it, Addison." His voice was flat, devoid of emotion, yet laced with an undeniable command. The dismissal in his tone was absolute.

My mind raced. How much more could I take? My stomach churned violently, and my head pounded. I felt a wave of dizziness wash over me. I wanted to collapse, to disappear.

But then, a cold resolve settled over me. No. Not yet. I had come too far. I had sacrificed too much.

I took a deep, shaky breath, forcing the nausea down. "Of course, Kasey," I said, my voice thin but steady. "Anything to ensure the collection receives the attention it deserves." I placed the carved bird back gently on the table, my fingers lingering for a moment, a silent farewell to a past that was truly gone.

Ethan watched me, a new flicker in his eyes. It wasn't suspicion now. It was something darker, something almost... disturbed. He seemed to sense a shift in me, a dangerous calm.

"Addison," he said, his voice hard. "You're... quiet today. Did you finally accept your place?"

I met his gaze, my own eyes, I hoped, devoid of any visible emotion. "I accept the reality of my situation, Ethan," I replied, the words carefully chosen. "And I understand my role."

He scoffed, but there was a hint of uneasiness in his expression. It was fleeting, though. He quickly dismissed it. He turned to Kasey, his arm wrapping around her waist. "Come, Kasey. Let's leave Addison to her... 'duties'." He emphasized the word with a mocking sneer, as if my work, my passion, was a paltry, insignificant thing.

He then gestured expansively around the gallery, a dismissive flick of his wrist. "And try not to make this place look any more like a mausoleum than it already does."

He and Kasey started to walk away, their footsteps echoing on the polished marble floors. Kasey leaned her head on Ethan' s shoulder, her eyes darting back to me, a triumphant glint in them. She thought she had won. They both did.

My stomach twisted again, a sharp, cramping pain. My head throbbed. The air felt heavy, suffocating. I felt the familiar burn of humiliation, the slow, agonizing erosion of my spirit. I wanted to scream, to lash out, to rip down every single one of Kasey' s gaudy paintings.

Ethan paused at the gallery exit, his hand still on Kasey' s back. He turned his head slightly, his gaze hooking mine. His eyes, cold and hard, locked onto mine. "Oh, and Addison," he called out, his voice carrying just loud enough to cut through the elegant silence. "Don't forget to clean up the mess you made. You always were so clumsy."

He was referring to the fallen pedestal, the tiny chip in its marble top where my head had hit. A fresh wave of indignation, cold and bitter, washed over me.

Then, just before he walked out completely, he added, his voice laced with venom, "And know this, Addison. You are nothing without me. Nothing. I own you."

His words hit me like a physical punch to the gut, stealing my breath. My entire body stiffened, a cold dread washing over me. He owned me. He truly believed it. And he had just proven how far he would go to enforce that belief.

A cold, hard knot formed in my stomach. My head swam. My hands, still clutching the signed document, started to tremble uncontrollably. He had signed it. He had signed away his claim. But his words, his absolute conviction, still held me captive. Still twisted the knife. He still wielded his power like a weapon.

My eyes fell on the pristine white walls of the gallery. For five years, this place, once a testament to our shared love for art, had been a cage. And I, like some exotic bird, had been left to wither inside it.

The pain of his words, of his casual cruelty, was almost unbearable. It felt like my soul was being flayed, layer by agonizing layer. I closed my eyes, trying to block out the image of him leaving with Kasey, the sound of his dismissive words. But they were etched into my mind, a constant replay of my humiliation.

I stood there, trembling, the signed contract a crumpled mess in my hand. He thought I was broken. He thought I was defeated. He had no idea what he had just done. Or what I was about to do.

This was just the beginning.

Addison Anderson POV:

The scent of his cheap cologne, cloying and unfamiliar, clung to Kasey's hair as Ethan stroked it. My breath hitched. Five years. Five years since the accident stole him from me, leaving a cruel stranger in his place. A man who sat across the gallery, openly displaying his affection for another woman, while I, his wife, watched. My heart, a withered thing, still beat with a phantom pain of what we once were.

Ethan' s laugh echoed, a hollow sound that grated against my nerves. Kasey, her eyes gleaming with triumph, leaned into him, a possessive hand on his arm. This scene was a tableau I had grown accustomed to, a daily brutality delivered with careless ease. It felt like watching my own funeral, day after day, year after year.

I adjusted the lapel of my blazer, the fabric suddenly feeling too tight, too constricting. My smile, practiced and brittle, remained fixed as a potential buyer approached. This gallery, once our shared dream, was now my cage. I was Addison Anderson, renowned art gallery owner, and I had a job to do. My reputation, my family' s legacy, depended on it. Resilience, my father used to say, was the Anderson birthright.

"Another piece from the new collection, Mr. Davies?" I asked, my voice steady, betraying none of the turmoil churning inside me.

I guided him toward a large abstract piece, explaining its nuances, the artist' s vision, the investment potential. My words flowed, professional and confident, a stark contrast to the trembling mess I felt on the inside. This was my sanctuary, my battleground.

A shadow fell over me. Ethan. He stood beside me, not to support, but to dismiss. His eyes, once full of warmth for me, were now pools of cold disdain.

"Still peddling these mediocre talents, Addison?" His voice was a low sneer, meant only for my ears. "I thought you' d have graduated to something with actual merit by now. Or perhaps your taste has devolved alongside your... other qualities."

The words struck me like a physical blow. A cold dread settled deep in my stomach. I felt my face flush, but I forced my expression to remain neutral. Mr. Davies shifted uncomfortably, sensing the tension.

Kasey, never one to miss an opportunity, sauntered closer, her smile sickly sweet. "Oh, Ethan, don' t be so harsh. Addison tries her best, I' m sure." Her gaze flickered to me, a flash of malice in her polished eyes. "It' s just hard to keep up with truly innovative artists, isn' t it, darling?"

She glanced at the painting I was presenting, then at a vibrant, chaotic piece of her own hanging prominently. It was strategically placed, of course, a constant reminder of her encroaching presence.

"My latest work, 'Eternal Flame,' has been quite the topic of conversation," Kasey purred, addressing Mr. Davies directly, effectively hijacking my client. "Ethan says it perfectly captures the passion of our newest artistic movement."

My jaw tightened. She was a master of self-promotion, selling hype over substance. Her art was flashy, superficial, devoid of genuine emotion, much like Kasey herself. She valued public adoration above all else.

A discreet buzz vibrated in my pocket. My phone. I excused myself, pretending to check a notification. My fingers trembled slightly as I palmed the device, quickly scanning the encrypted message. Contract confirmed. Ready for signing.

A surge of adrenaline, cold and sharp, shot through me. This was it.

I caught Ethan' s eye as I returned. He was watching me, a flicker of suspicion in his gaze. It was quick, gone almost before I registered it, but it was there. He knew me too well, even this broken version of him. Had he seen something in my eyes? A flicker of defiance?

"Ethan, darling," I said, my voice sweet, a veneer of normalcy I barely managed to maintain. "I have some papers for your signature. Just routine acquisition documents for the new quarter. You know, the ones your lawyers usually send over."

He eyed me, then the folder I held out. His lips curled. "More of your administrative busywork? Can't it wait?"

"It's pressing, Ethan," I insisted, maintaining eye contact. "Legal deadlines, you understand. Wouldn't want our joint ventures to suffer, would we?"

He snorted, a sound of pure arrogance. "Fine. Get it over with." He snatched the pen from my hand, his movements impatient, dismissive. He didn't even glance at the document before scribbling his name, his signature bold and sprawling. The irony was a bitter taste in my mouth. He was signing away his future, not mine. He thought it was just another piece of paper, another inconsequential detail handled by his inconvenient wife.

A secret, exhilarating thrill coursed through me. It was done. The gallery, our gallery, was mine. He had signed over his controlling interest, disguised as a mundane art acquisition contract. The legal team had been meticulous.

He tossed the pen back onto the table, a clatter that jarred my already frayed nerves. "Happy now, Addison? Always something, isn't it? Running this place into the ground with your 'vision'." He gestured around the elegant space, his eyes filled with contempt. "This place is a relic. A museum, not a gallery. Kasey's work breathes life into dead spaces."

Kasey, emboldened, sidled up to Ethan, pressing her body against his. She kissed his cheek, her eyes fixed on me, a taunt in their depths. "Don't worry, Ethan. We'll soon revitalize everything. Won't we, darling?"

A wave of nausea hit me, hot and sickening. My head swam. The air felt thick, heavy with their blatant disrespect, their sickening affection. My stomach churned, a knot of revulsion tightening in my gut. I gripped the signed document, the crisp paper a tangible symbol of my imminent freedom, and the cost.

As I turned to leave, Ethan reached out, grabbing my wrist. His touch, once gentle, was now a vice. It sent a shiver of dread through me.

"Where do you think you're going?" he snarled, his eyes narrowing. "Don't you have something to say? Some gratitude for my... generosity?"

His grip tightened, his fingernails digging into my skin. I winced, a sharp pain shooting up my arm.

"Let go, Ethan," I whispered, my voice barely audible.

His eyes flared, a dark, primal rage erupting. "Let go? After everything? After you've manipulated and schemed your way through my life?"

He shoved me then, hard. My head snapped back, hitting the edge of a nearby display pedestal with a sickening thud. Stars exploded behind my eyes, and a searing pain erupted at the base of my skull. I cried out, a guttural sound of shock and agony, clutching my head. My vision blurred.

He towered over me, his face contorted with fury, utterly devoid of remorse. "Don't make a sound, you pathetic creature," he hissed, his voice dangerously low. "You think a few tears will make me forget your deceit?" His eyes, once so tender, now held nothing but cold contempt.

This wasn't the first time. The bruises, the whispered threats, the emotional lacerations – they were a tapestry woven into the fabric of my life these past five years. I had endured it all, clinging to the ghost of the man he once was, hoping, praying, for his memory to return. But that man was gone. Replaced by this monster.

I pushed myself up, my head throbbing, a metallic taste in my mouth. My vision cleared just enough to see Kasey watching, a smirk playing on her lips. She didn't flinch. She probably enjoyed the show.

"I need to go," I managed, clutching the signed contract like a lifeline. I had to get out. Before I broke completely.

Ethan' s eyes narrowed. He probably noticed the frantic urgency in my voice, the way my hands trembled. "So eager to run away, are we?" he challenged, his voice dripping with malice. "Trying to escape the consequences of your own actions, Addison?"

"I am merely fulfilling my duties here," I said, forcing a professional tone, pushing down the rising panic. "The gallery requires my attention. Unlike some, I still have responsibilities."

He laughed, a harsh, humorless sound. "Responsibilities? You mean obligations, don't you, Addy?" His use of the old nickname, the one he used in our happiest moments, was a cruel twist of the knife. Each syllable scraped against my raw nerves, ripping open old wounds. My breath caught in my throat. I felt a tremor run through my body, a desperate urge to clamp my hands over my ears, to block out the searing pain of that name on his lips.

I turned to leave, needing to escape, needing air. Needing to breathe without the suffocating weight of his presence.

But Kasey, sensing my desperation, stepped into my path. Her eyes, filled with a predatory glee, sparkling. "Oh, Addison, don't rush off just yet. There's something I need your expert opinion on." She held up a small, exquisitely carved wooden bird, a delicate piece of art. "This is for Ethan's office. Do you think it fits his minimalist aesthetic, or is it too... sentimental?"

The bird was a replica of one Ethan had carved for me on our first anniversary. My stomach clenched, bile rising in my throat. This was a deliberate, calculated torment.

Humiliation burned through me, hotter than anger. I felt my face flush, my hands clenching into fists. The urge to scream, to lash out, was almost unbearable. But I couldn't. Not yet.

Ethan watched me, a cold smile playing on his lips. "Well, Addison? The expert opinion, please. Kasey values your... insights." His tone was a whip, lashing out, demanding my compliance, my utter capitulation.

My hands trembled as I took the bird from Kasey. The small, familiar carving felt impossibly heavy in my palm. My fingers brushed against the smooth wood, a ghost of memory, a whisper of a time when love was real. A tear, hot and traitorous, pricked at the corner of my eye. I fought it back.

"It's... exquisite," I choked out, the word tasting like ashes. My voice was hoarse, strained. I hated the sound of my own surrender. I felt exposed, vulnerable, a puppet on their strings.

Ethan's eyes, dark and knowing, lingered on me. He saw my pain, my humiliation. And he reveled in it. A flicker of something predatory, almost satisfied, crossed his face. He leaned closer to Kasey, whispering something in her ear, his gaze still fixed on me, a silent threat.

A sudden, sharp twist of agony bloomed in my stomach. Was he laughing at me? Or worse, was he still trying to read me? A cold sweat broke out on my forehead. I felt a tremor run through my body. The signed papers in my hand felt like a dangerous secret, a fragile shield.

"Addison," Kasey' s voice cut through my thoughts, sickly sweet. "Since you're so good with details, perhaps you could re-arrange the display for my new collection? The lighting could be... more dramatic, don't you think?" It was an order, disguised as a request, a demand for me to serve her.

My eyes snapped to hers, a silent battle raging within me. My hands, still clutching the small wooden bird, tightened. The urge to smash it, to scream, was almost overwhelming.

Ethan cleared his throat. "Good idea, Kasey. Addison certainly has an eye for presentation, even if her own art sense is lacking. Get to it, Addison." His voice was flat, devoid of emotion, yet laced with an undeniable command. The dismissal in his tone was absolute.

My mind raced. How much more could I take? My stomach churned violently, and my head pounded. I felt a wave of dizziness wash over me. I wanted to collapse, to disappear.

But then, a cold resolve settled over me. No. Not yet. I had come too far. I had sacrificed too much.

I took a deep, shaky breath, forcing the nausea down. "Of course, Kasey," I said, my voice thin but steady. "Anything to ensure the collection receives the attention it deserves." I placed the carved bird back gently on the table, my fingers lingering for a moment, a silent farewell to a past that was truly gone.

Ethan watched me, a new flicker in his eyes. It wasn't suspicion now. It was something darker, something almost... disturbed. He seemed to sense a shift in me, a dangerous calm.

"Addison," he said, his voice hard. "You're... quiet today. Did you finally accept your place?"

I met his gaze, my own eyes, I hoped, devoid of any visible emotion. "I accept the reality of my situation, Ethan," I replied, the words carefully chosen. "And I understand my role."

He scoffed, but there was a hint of uneasiness in his expression. It was fleeting, though. He quickly dismissed it. He turned to Kasey, his arm wrapping around her waist. "Come, Kasey. Let's leave Addison to her... 'duties'." He emphasized the word with a mocking sneer, as if my work, my passion, was a paltry, insignificant thing.

He then gestured expansively around the gallery, a dismissive flick of his wrist. "And try not to make this place look any more like a mausoleum than it already does."

He and Kasey started to walk away, their footsteps echoing on the polished marble floors. Kasey leaned her head on Ethan' s shoulder, her eyes darting back to me, a triumphant glint in them. She thought she had won. They both did.

My stomach twisted again, a sharp, cramping pain. My head throbbed. The air felt heavy, suffocating. I felt the familiar burn of humiliation, the slow, agonizing erosion of my spirit. I wanted to scream, to lash out, to rip down every single one of Kasey' s gaudy paintings.

Ethan paused at the gallery exit, his hand still on Kasey' s back. He turned his head slightly, his gaze hooking mine. His eyes, cold and hard, locked onto mine. "Oh, and Addison," he called out, his voice carrying just loud enough to cut through the elegant silence. "Don't forget to clean up the mess you made. You always were so clumsy."

He was referring to the fallen pedestal, the tiny chip in its marble top where my head had hit. A fresh wave of indignation, cold and bitter, washed over me.

Then, just before he walked out completely, he added, his voice laced with venom, "And know this, Addison. You are nothing without me. Nothing. I own you."

His words hit me like a physical punch to the gut, stealing my breath. My entire body stiffened, a cold dread washing over me. He owned me. He truly believed it. And he had just proven how far he would go to enforce that belief.

A cold, hard knot formed in my stomach. My head swam. My hands, still clutching the signed document, started to tremble uncontrollably. He had signed it. He had signed away his claim. But his words, his absolute conviction, still held me captive. Still twisted the knife. He still wielded his power like a weapon.

My eyes fell on the pristine white walls of the gallery. For five years, this place, once a testament to our shared love for art, had been a cage. And I, like some exotic bird, had been left to wither inside it.

The pain of his words, of his casual cruelty, was almost unbearable. It felt like my soul was being flayed, layer by agonizing layer. I closed my eyes, trying to block out the image of him leaving with Kasey, the sound of his dismissive words. But they were etched into my mind, a constant replay of my humiliation.

I stood there, trembling, the signed contract a crumpled mess in my hand. He thought I was broken. He thought I was defeated. He had no idea what he had just done. Or what I was about to do.

This was just the beginning.

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Billionaires

5.0

The air in the Hayes family ballroom was thick with money and expectation. Five years. It had been five years since Ethan Miller, a man on the cover of tech magazines, had last stood in a room like this, surrounded by the same welcoming, curious faces. Then he saw her. Chloe Hayes, weaving through the crowd, a vision in silver. She stopped before him and got down on one knee, producing a ring from a small, velvet box. "Ethan Miller," Chloe announced, her voice ringing with confidence. "I was a fool to let you go. Marry me." Everyone stared at him, their faces glowing with anticipation, recalling the boy who loved Chloe with a desperate, all-consuming passion. But Ethan's gaze was flat. His mind drifted back to their engagement party five years ago, the night she stood on a stage and accused him of being a fraud, claiming he stole the technology meant to make his name-all to protect another man. The memory didn't sting anymore; it was just a fact. He finally broke the silence. "I'm sorry, Chloe. I can't accept." Whispers erupted. Chloe's perfect facade cracked. "Moved on? Ethan, don't be ridiculous. It's always been you and me." "No," he corrected gently. "It was you and me. It isn't anymore. I'm married." As if on cue, a woman with warm, intelligent eyes and a little girl with Ethan's dark hair entered the ballroom. "Daddy!" the little girl cried, running to him. Ethan knelt, not for Chloe, but for his daughter. Chloe remained on the floor, the ring box in her hand, her reality shattered. "No, this isn't real. You're lying." "I don't entertain trash, Chloe," Ethan said, his voice cold. His wife, Sarah, stepped forward, fierce and protective. "He's my husband. We were married three years ago. If you continue to harass my family, I will see you in court." Ethan turned his back on Chloe, walking away with Sarah and Lily. He was finally, completely free.

Regretful Man, Redeemed Woman

Regretful Man, Redeemed Woman

Romance

5.0

I put the divorce papers on the mahogany desk, a soft thud in the quiet study. Ethan didn't even look up from his laptop. "Divorce papers," I said, my voice steady, betraying none of the thousand times I' d practiced this moment. He signed them without a glance, dismissing a decade of my love, two years of marriage, with a casual flick of a pen. "I' m going to be busy with Isabella for the next few days," he added, attention already back on his screen. "Don' t call me unless the house is on fire." His indifference was a physical blow, a chilling premonition of the betrayal to come. Just three weeks ago, I had held a positive pregnancy test, naive hope swelling in my heart that our baby would finally make him see me, make our house a home. Instead, I watched him propose to Isabella, his college sweetheart, on the evening news, a public spectacle of his true affections. The shock sent me to the floor, pain tearing through me, and I woke up in a hospital bed-alone-the doctor' s grim words confirming I had lost our child. He never even knew it existed. Now, I found myself packing a single suitcase, leaving behind everything, even the life I had so desperately tried to build. My best friend, Chloe, asked, "He didn' t even ask why?" "No," I whispered, my hand instinctively going to my flat stomach, an ache, a constant, dull reminder. I felt empty, completely empty, yet a strange sense of calm settled over me. Because as I looked at the signed papers, I knew this wasn't just a divorce. It was a declaration of independence.

The Sterling Contract: From Obligation to Love

The Sterling Contract: From Obligation to Love

Romance

5.0

The humid air in front of the Marriage Bureau was thick with my unease. I was marrying a stranger, Julian Sterling, a man as cold and imposing as his family's fortune, all to save my family from ruin. Just as I thought I'd survived the sham ceremony, my ex, Caleb, and his fiancée, Chloe, appeared, dripping with condescension. Chloe, whose family had crushed my father's business, smirked about her upcoming lavish wedding, intending to humiliate me. Suddenly, a wave of defiant fury washed over me. I clung to Julian' s arm, forcing a syrupy smile, declaring we'd be there, and then brandished our freshly signed marriage certificate, promising his legal team would handle any further slander. My cold husband' s indifferent confirmation froze Caleb, making Chloe' s triumphant facade crumble. But their shock soon turned to malice, as Chloe escalated her attacks, spreading vile, AI-generated intimate photos of me across my university forum, aiming to destroy my reputation and career. The university dismissed my pleas, leaving me alone and shattered, walking aimlessly towards the Hudson, feeling utterly hopeless and violated. Why was this happening to me? Just when I thought I was completely adrift, Julian, the man who cared about nothing, found me. He was enraged, not at me, but at the injustice, revealing he' d already unleashed his formidable resources, tracing the digital assault directly back to Chloe. He secured her suspension and initiated a police investigation. In that moment, he wasn't just my contract husband; he was my unexpected protector, and for the first time, I felt a fragile thread of hope, ready to fight back.

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Stripper's Love: I Married My Ex's Uncle

Stripper's Love: I Married My Ex's Uncle

G~Aden
4.2

I'm a moaning mess as Antonio slams into me from behind. His hips hit me hard, and each deep thrust sends shockwaves through my body. My breasts bounce with every movement, my eyes roll back, and I moan his name without control. The pleasure he gives me is overwhelming-I can't hold it in. I feel my walls tighten around his thick length. The pressure builds fast, and then- I explode around him, my orgasm tearing through me. He groans loud and deep as he releases inside me, his hot seed spilling into me in thick pulses. Just when I think he's done, his grip shifts. He turns me over and lays me flat on the bed. His dark eyes stare into mine for a moment, filled with raw hunger. I glance down- He's still hard. Before I can react, he grabs my wrists, pins me down, and pushes himself inside me again. He fills me completely. My hips rise on instinct, meeting his rhythm. Our bodies move together, locked in a wild, uncontrollable dance. "You're fucking sweet," he groans, his voice rough and breathless. "I can't get enough of you... not after that night, Sol," he growls, slamming into me harder. The force of his words and his thrusts make my body shake. "Come for me," he commands, his voice low and full of heat. And just like that, my body trembles. Waves of pleasure crash over me. I cry out, shaking with the force of my orgasm. "Mine," he growls again, louder this time. His voice is feral, wild, like a beast claiming what belongs to him. The sound sends a shiver down my spine. *** Solene was betrayed, humiliated, and erased by Rowan Brook, the man she once called husband, Solene is left with nothing but her name and a burning hunger for revenge. She turns to the one man powerful enough to destroy the Brooks family from within: Rowan's estranged and dangerous uncle, Antonio Rodriguez. He's ruthless. A playboy who never sleeps with the same woman twice. But when Solene walks into his world, he doesn't just break the rules, he creates new ones just for her. What begins as a calculated game quickly spirals into obsession, power plays, and secrets too deadly to stay buried. Because Solene isn't just anyone's ex... she's the woman they should've never underestimated. Can she survive the price of revenge? Or will her heart become the next casualty? And when the truth comes out, will Antonio still choose her... or destroy her?

I Slapped My Fiancé-Then Married His Billionaire Nemesis

I Slapped My Fiancé-Then Married His Billionaire Nemesis

Jessica C. Dolan
4.9

Being second best is practically in my DNA. My sister got the love, the attention, the spotlight. And now, even her damn fiancé. Technically, Rhys Granger was my fiancé now-billionaire, devastatingly hot, and a walking Wall Street wet dream. My parents shoved me into the engagement after Catherine disappeared, and honestly? I didn't mind. I'd crushed on Rhys for years. This was my chance, right? My turn to be the chosen one? Wrong. One night, he slapped me. Over a mug. A stupid, chipped, ugly mug my sister gave him years ago. That's when it hit me-he didn't love me. He didn't even see me. I was just a warm-bodied placeholder for the woman he actually wanted. And apparently, I wasn't even worth as much as a glorified coffee cup. So I slapped him right back, dumped his ass, and prepared for disaster-my parents losing their minds, Rhys throwing a billionaire tantrum, his terrifying family plotting my untimely demise. Obviously, I needed alcohol. A lot of alcohol. Enter him. Tall, dangerous, unfairly hot. The kind of man who makes you want to sin just by existing. I'd met him only once before, and that night, he just happened to be at the same bar as my drunk, self-pitying self. So I did the only logical thing: I dragged him into a hotel room and ripped off his clothes. It was reckless. It was stupid. It was completely ill-advised. But it was also: Best. Sex. Of. My. Life. And, as it turned out, the best decision I'd ever made. Because my one-night stand isn't just some random guy. He's richer than Rhys, more powerful than my entire family, and definitely more dangerous than I should be playing with. And now, he's not letting me go.

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