I Tore Up His Check, Then He Bought My Life

I Tore Up His Check, Then He Bought My Life

Rabbit

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After seven years of scrubbing floors to escape my past, my doctor fiancé convinced me to attend the Met Gala. It was supposed to be a one-night trip back to a world I hated. But then the doors crashed open, and the monster I.d left for dead rolled in on a wheelchair. Within twenty-four hours, Fielding Hancock.s shadow had poisoned everything. My fiancé, Nathan, saw a photo of Fielding touching my arm and completely shattered. He got me fired, drained our joint bank account of my life savings, and left me homeless on a sidewalk in Queens. I thought I had hit rock bottom, but then the hospital called. My mother had suffered a stroke, triggered by an envelope Fielding sent her. The insurance Nathan had just reported as fraudulent wouldn.t cover the ICU, and I was broke. With my mother.s life on the line and two hours to find five thousand dollars, I was out of options. He had systematically destroyed every piece of my new life, cornering me until there was nowhere left to run. I made the only call I could. Fielding picked up on the first ring. "You win," I said, my voice dead. "I'm yours."

I Tore Up His Check, Then He Bought My Life Chapter 1 No.1

"You look like you're about to throw up, and not in the cute, drank-too-much-champagne way."

Essence Fitzgerald didn't answer. She peeled the latex gloves off her hands with a snap that echoed in the tiled locker room. Her skin was red and raw from the twelfth wash of the day. The smell of iodine and hospital-grade bleach clung to her hair, a sharp chemical barrier between her and the world she was about to re-enter.

"I'm fine, Zoe," Essence said. Her voice was scratchy. "I just finished a twelve-hour shift. I'm tired."

"You're terrified," Zoe corrected, leaning against the metal lockers in a red dress that cost more than Essence's current annual rent. "But you can't back out. If you don't show up, they win. They'll say you're hiding in a sewer somewhere."

"I live in Queens, Zoe. To them, that is a sewer."

Essence opened her locker. She reached into the back corner, behind a stack of nursing textbooks, and pulled out a small, velvet pouch. She loosened the drawstring and tipped the contents into her palm. The ring Nathan had given her sat there, cool and innocent. It was a violation of hospital protocol to wear stones that could tear gloves or harbor bacteria, so she kept it hidden during shifts. Now, she slid it onto her finger. It felt heavy, not with carats, but with the weight of the secret it represented.

Hanging inside the locker, wrapped in plastic that had yellowed slightly with age, was the dress. A vintage black Chanel. It wasn't a gift. It was the last thing she had charged to the Fitzgerald family American Express Black Card five minutes before the assets were frozen-a final, desperate act of theft to secure armor for a future she knew would be cold.

She touched the fabric. It felt cold.

"Turn around," Essence said.

She stripped off her scrubs. Her body was thinner now than it had been at twenty-two. The cafeteria food and the stress of nursing school had carved the softness off her hips. She stepped into the dress. It slid up her legs, familiar and foreign all at once.

The zipper stuck at the small of her back.

"Damn it." Essence reached back, her shoulder popping. She sucked in a breath, compressing her ribs until they ached, and yanked. The metal teeth bit into the fabric, then closed. It was tight. Not the kind of tight that flattered, but the kind that restricted oxygen. It felt like a corset made of memories.

She looked in the mirror. The woman staring back had dark circles under her eyes that concealer couldn't quite hide. She looked like a ghost wearing a dead girl's clothes.

"Perfect," Zoe lied. She checked her phone. "My Uber Black is downstairs. I'll drop you?"

"No." Essence grabbed her clutch-a beaded thing missing three stones on the bottom corner. "You go. I need a minute. I'll meet you there."

"Essence-"

"Go, Zoe. Please."

Zoe hesitated, then hugged her briefly and left. The silence of the locker room rushed back in. Essence waited two minutes. Then she walked out the back exit of the hospital, into the biting November wind.

She didn't wave for a taxi. Her bank app had sent her a low-balance notification this morning: $42.18. A ride to the Metropolitan Museum of Art would cost fifty.

She turned her collar up against the wind and walked toward the subway station.

The 6 train was crowded. A man smelling of cheap beer and wet wool sat across from her. His eyes traveled from the hem of her Chanel gown up to her exposed collarbone. It wasn't a look of admiration; it was a look of calculation. He was wondering if the dress was real, and if the woman wearing it was worth robbing.

Essence crossed her arms, digging her fingernails into her biceps. She stared at the advertisement for personal injury lawyers above his head until the train screeched into 77th Street.

The walk to the museum was a gauntlet. The wind whipped her hair across her face. By the time she reached the imposing limestone façade of The Met, her feet were throbbing. She was wearing heels she hadn't touched in four years. The leather had dried out and stiffened, turning the toe box into a torture device.

The Great Hall steps were tented in white, a fortress of exclusivity. Flashbulbs popped like lightning storms behind the heavy velvet ropes. A black Bentley pulled up to the curb. A doorman in a gold-braided uniform rushed to open the car door. A woman Essence recognized from her debutante days stepped out, flashing a smile at the paparazzi.

Essence waited on the sidewalk. The security checkpoint was rigorous. This wasn't just a hotel ballroom; this was the Met Gala, the hardest ticket in the world to secure. Without a QR code and a retina scan, you didn't get past the first clipboard.

She approached the check-in desk, her heart hammering against her ribs. She didn't have a ticket. Zoe had said she "handled it," but Zoe's definition of handling things usually involved optimism rather than logistics.

"Name?" the woman at the desk asked, her stylus hovering over an iPad.

"Fitzgerald. Essence."

The woman paused. She didn't scroll. She looked up, her expression shifting from boredom to sharp curiosity. "Fitzgerald? You're not on the general guest list."

Essence felt the bile rise. "I see. My mistake. I'll just-"

"You're on the Board's discretionary override list," the woman interrupted, tapping a separate tab on her screen. "Added ten minutes ago by... Mr. Joshua Hayes. Legal counsel."

Essence froze. Joshua Hayes was Fielding's lawyer. The man who had drafted the 200-page prenup she was currently violating.

"Go right in, Ms. Fitzgerald," the woman said, her voice dropping a decibel. "They're waiting."

She walked into the Great Hall. The vaulted ceilings were blinding. The noise was a wall of sound-clinking glass, laughter, the low hum of gossip. As she stepped onto the carpet, she felt the shift. It started at the tables nearest the door. Heads turned. Whispers jumped from person to person like a contagion.

She found a massive Egyptian stone column and stood in its shadow.

"You made it!" Zoe appeared, a glass of champagne in each hand. She shoved one at Essence. "Drink. Immediately."

Essence took a sip. The bubbles burned her throat. "Everyone is staring."

"Let them stare. They're bored. You're the most interesting thing that's happened to them since the market crash."

"Look who decided to grace us with her presence."

The voice was high, sharp, and fake. Essence didn't need to turn around to know it was Chloie Booth.

Chloie walked over, flanked by two women Essence vaguely remembered from prep school. Chloie was wearing emeralds that were definitely new money, big and gaudy against her pale skin. She looked at Essence with the specific hatred of someone who knows their position is stolen and fears the rightful owner's return.

"Chloie," Essence said. She kept her voice flat.

"I didn't think you could afford a ticket," Chloie said, looking Essence up and down. "Or is this a charity case? Did the committee let you in for old times' sake?"

"I bought my ticket," Essence said. It was a lie. Fielding's lawyer had forced her in.

"And the dress?" Chloie poked a manicured finger at Essence's shoulder. "2017? Vintage. How... sustainable of you. Did you charge that to the account right before the marshals came? I heard stories."

The women behind her giggled. It was a cruel, wet sound.

"It's classic," Zoe snapped. "Unlike whatever that green tablecloth is you're wearing."

Chloie ignored Zoe. She stepped closer to Essence, invading her personal space. "We heard about the job, Essence. A nurse? Really? Changing bedpans for minimum wage?"

"It's honest work," Essence said. Her throat felt tight. "I help people."

"You wipe asses," Chloie corrected, her voice loud enough to carry to the nearby tables. "God, how the mighty have fallen. Do you steal the patients' pills to make rent?"

Essence gripped her champagne flute. She wanted to throw it in Chloie's face. But she couldn't. That was what the old Essence would have done. The new Essence couldn't afford a lawsuit for dry cleaning bills.

"Excuse me," Essence said, turning to leave.

"Don't run away," Chloie called out. "We were just-"

BOOM.

The heavy bronze doors at the main entrance slammed open.

It wasn't a normal opening. It was forceful, demanding. The sound echoed through the cavernous room, cutting through the music and the chatter.

Silence swept across the museum hall. It moved like a wave, starting at the door and rolling all the way to the back. Even Chloie shut her mouth.

Essence felt a cold prickle at the base of her spine. It was a biological reaction, the way a deer freezes when it hears a twig snap.

She turned toward the door.

The crowd parted. People stepped back, pulling their chairs in, clearing a wide path down the center of the room.

First, she heard the sound. A low, electric hum. Then, the rhythmic click-clack of rubber wheels rolling over the stone threshold onto the floor.

Essence stopped breathing.

A wheelchair.

A sleek, black, motorized wheelchair moved into the light. And sitting in it, wearing a tuxedo that fit him like a second skin, was the man who had haunted her nightmares for seven years.

Fielding Hancock.

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I Tore Up His Check, Then He Bought My Life I Tore Up His Check, Then He Bought My Life Rabbit Romance
“After seven years of scrubbing floors to escape my past, my doctor fiancé convinced me to attend the Met Gala. It was supposed to be a one-night trip back to a world I hated. But then the doors crashed open, and the monster I.d left for dead rolled in on a wheelchair. Within twenty-four hours, Fielding Hancock.s shadow had poisoned everything. My fiancé, Nathan, saw a photo of Fielding touching my arm and completely shattered. He got me fired, drained our joint bank account of my life savings, and left me homeless on a sidewalk in Queens. I thought I had hit rock bottom, but then the hospital called. My mother had suffered a stroke, triggered by an envelope Fielding sent her. The insurance Nathan had just reported as fraudulent wouldn.t cover the ICU, and I was broke. With my mother.s life on the line and two hours to find five thousand dollars, I was out of options. He had systematically destroyed every piece of my new life, cornering me until there was nowhere left to run. I made the only call I could. Fielding picked up on the first ring. "You win," I said, my voice dead. "I'm yours."”
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