From Tool To Treasure: My New Life

From Tool To Treasure: My New Life

Gavin

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For nine years, I was Kane Hill' s secret. I was his emotional punching bag, the convenient stand-in for my twin sister, Harper-the woman he truly loved. I endured his cruelty, convincing myself his control was a twisted form of love. Then, just before he announced their engagement, Harper sent me a recording. It was Kane, his voice smooth and dismissive. "Eden? She's useful," he told Harper. "An emotional pressure valve. I need to vent on someone so I can be the perfect man for you." The cold truth shattered me. I wasn't a person, not even a substitute. I was a tool. That night, he polished Harper's engagement ring right in front of me before ending our nine-year "game" with a single, bored phone call. He never knew that I was the girl who had saved him at a summer camp all those years ago, not Harper. He'd called my attempts to tell him the truth "pathetic." So I packed a single bag and vanished into the night, leaving his gilded cage for a quiet farm in Vermont. But just as I started to heal, he found me, clutching the proof of my story in his hand, begging for a second chance I had no intention of giving.

Chapter 1

For nine years, I was Kane Hill' s secret. I was his emotional punching bag, the convenient stand-in for my twin sister, Harper-the woman he truly loved. I endured his cruelty, convincing myself his control was a twisted form of love.

Then, just before he announced their engagement, Harper sent me a recording. It was Kane, his voice smooth and dismissive.

"Eden? She's useful," he told Harper. "An emotional pressure valve. I need to vent on someone so I can be the perfect man for you."

The cold truth shattered me. I wasn't a person, not even a substitute. I was a tool. That night, he polished Harper's engagement ring right in front of me before ending our nine-year "game" with a single, bored phone call.

He never knew that I was the girl who had saved him at a summer camp all those years ago, not Harper. He'd called my attempts to tell him the truth "pathetic."

So I packed a single bag and vanished into the night, leaving his gilded cage for a quiet farm in Vermont. But just as I started to heal, he found me, clutching the proof of my story in his hand, begging for a second chance I had no intention of giving.

Chapter 1

Kane arrived late, as he always did. The familiar click of the key in the lock sent a shiver down my spine, a mix of anticipation and dread that had become my nightly ritual. It was almost midnight, but for him, the night was just beginning.

He stepped into the living room, his suit jacket already off, tie loosened. His eyes, sharp and assessing, landed on me.

"You're still up." It wasn't a question.

My hands, which had been clutching a book I wasn't reading, tightened. "I was waiting for you."

He raised an eyebrow. "Loyalty, I suppose. Or boredom?" His voice was smooth, edged with a familiar skepticism. He always questioned my motives, even the simplest ones.

I lowered my gaze, a knot forming in my stomach. "Neither. Just... waiting." The words felt small, insignificant. They always did when I spoke to him.

A faint, humorless smile touched his lips. "Don't pout, Eden. It doesn't suit you." He walked past me, his expensive cologne filling the air, a scent I both loved and hated because it always preceded his demands.

I remained silent, standing rigid in the middle of the room. It was easier that way. Less chance of saying the wrong thing.

"Come here." His voice was low, a command.

My feet moved before my brain gave the order. Nine years. Nine years of automatic obedience.

He stopped in front of the floor-to-ceiling mirror. His reflection, tall and powerful, loomed over mine. He ran a hand over his jaw. "You look tired. Dark circles." He tilted my chin up, his thumb brushing under my eye. "And a little... dull."

My chest tightened. Dull. That was me, I supposed. The muted version.

"You know what this is, don't you, Eden?" He didn't wait for an answer. "You're my pressure valve. The one I vent on, so I can be perfect for her."

The cold truth settled over me like a heavy blanket. Her. Harper. Always Harper.

He turned, his back to the mirror, pulling me closer. "Tell me, Eden. Why are you still here? What makes you worth keeping?"

My mind flashed back nine years, to the summer camp where I' d first seen him. He was a whirlwind of angry energy, tearing through the woods after a fight with his father. I, a newly aged-out foster kid volunteering at the camp, had found him in a rage, kicking at trees. I approached him, not with fear, but a quiet understanding. I' d seen that kind of raw pain before. I' d offered him a small, worn St. Christopher' s medal, telling him it was for protection. He' d scoffed, thrown it back, but I' d picked it up and placed it in his pocket, a silent prayer that he' d find peace.

A few weeks later, he' d found me again, not at the camp, but working at a small community garden. He' d introduced himself as Kane Hill, a name that would soon become synonymous with power and wealth in New York. He' d come back, he said, because he couldn't stop thinking about the girl who wasn't afraid of him. He' d seen me then, truly seen me, or so I thought.

I remember thinking I could be the one. The one to soothe his storms, to be his sanctuary. I' d pursued him, cautiously at first, then with an eager desperation born of loneliness and a longing for stability. I' d believed his possessiveness was love. That his control was care.

But then came the nights, early on, when he'd hold me tight, his body pressed against mine, and whisper another name. Harper. Always Harper. It was a knife twist every single time. A silent, excruciating reminder that I was a stand-in, a shadow.

"Eden?" Kane's voice cut through my memories, impatient.

My eyes met his in the mirror. My reflection stared back, a ghost. "Because... I'm here." It was the only answer I had left. The only truth.

He sighed, a sound of tolerant annoyance. "Right. Well, tomorrow is going to be a long day. You'll need to be rested." He released me, walking towards the kitchen. "Dinner is on the table, I'll peel your shrimp."

He sat down, picking up a glistening pink shrimp. He carefully removed the shell, a gesture that, in another life, might have been tender. He placed it on my plate.

I stared at it, confusion swirling. He was being... kind. What was this? A final kindness before the axe fell?

"Eat, Eden." His voice was firm, breaking my trance.

I picked up the shrimp, the taste of salt and bitterness filling my mouth, mirroring the taste in my heart. He used to laugh, watching me devour plates of seafood. He used to wipe a smudge from my cheek with his thumb. Those flashes of genuine affection, I now knew, were just part of the performance.

My gaze drifted to his left hand, resting casually on the table. He was idly polishing something on his ring finger. Not his usual signet ring. This one was far more delicate, intricately designed. A diamond, sparkling under the dim kitchen lights. An engagement ring.

My breath hitched. He was cleaning Harper's engagement ring.

The bitterness intensified, so strong it burned my throat. I swallowed hard, the shrimp suddenly tasting like ashes. This wasn't kindness. This was a rehearsal. He was practicing being the perfect fiancé for her, and I was his audience, his forgotten understudy.

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