Anissa is the perfect, lifeless wife of powerful D.C. politician Julian Sinclair. She endures this suffocating marriage solely to protect the vital funding for her Navajo tribe. But after sneaking out for a brief moment of freedom, she returns to find herself viciously framed. Julian's favorite mistress, Cecily, faked a severe allergic reaction and accused Anissa of poisoning her dessert. Julian violently grabs Anissa's arm, his eyes burning with cold fury. "I will trigger the punitive clauses in our prenuptial agreement." That single threat would instantly cut off her people's survival money. To bury the PR scandal, the family matriarch forces Anissa to swallow her pride. Under the mocking eyes of the household staff, Anissa is forced to fall to her knees beside the mistress's lounge, presenting a massive Cartier diamond bracelet to beg for forgiveness. "Please forgive me for the kitchen mix-up. I am so sorry." A camera flash captures her ultimate humiliation, yet Julian still glares at her defeated posture with inexplicable disgust. Anissa's heart burns with deep, suffocating rage. Why must she be a prisoner to this cruel family? And who was the deadly man she met in the alley tonight? The stranger who effortlessly overpowered her bodyguard and spoke of Arizona sandstorms, triggering blinding flashes of a past she can't remember. Grinding her teeth as she walks away from the suite, Anissa makes a silent vow. She will call that mysterious man, uncover her stolen memories, and tear this gilded cage apart.
Anissa unclasps the heavy diamond necklace from her throat.
She tosses it onto the velvet vanity. The jewels hit the polished wood with a sharp, ugly clink.
She stares at her reflection in the gilded mirror. Her stomach churns. A wave of hot nausea crawls up her throat. The woman staring back at her is a perfect, lifeless political wife. Her skin is powdered too pale. Her lips are painted a socially acceptable shade of rose. She looks like a corpse dressed for a high-society funeral.
Ashanti steps out from the deep shadows of the master bedroom. She doesn't make a sound. She hands Anissa a plain black hoodie and a pair of faded denim jeans.
Anissa strips off the restrictive silk gown. The fabric pools at her feet like shed skin. She quickly pulls the comfortable cotton over her head. The moment the soft fabric touches her skin, her lungs expand. Her breathing instantly eases. The crushing weight on her chest lifts.
Ashanti taps her own wrist. Her dark eyes are urgent. The security patrol shift change is happening right now. They have a three-minute window.
Anissa nods. She cracks the heavy oak bedroom door open. She peers into the silent, dimly lit grand corridor of the Sinclair Estate.
The hallway is empty. Anissa slips out. Her worn sneakers make zero sound on the imported Persian rug.
Ashanti follows closely behind her. Ashanti's eyes dart toward the ceiling cameras. She times their movements perfectly to the sweeping red sensor lights. They move like ghosts through the suffocating wealth of the house.
They reach the grand staircase. Anissa ducks behind a massive marble pillar just as two armed estate guards walk past.
"Did you see the guest list for the congressional gala?" one guard mutters.
"Yeah. Boss is going to be stressed," the other replies.
Anissa holds her breath. She presses her back against the cold stone of the pillar. The chill seeps through her hoodie. She waits for their heavy boots to fade down the hall. Her heart hammers against her ribs.
Ashanti taps Anissa's shoulder. She points toward the narrow servant's stairwell that leads down to the underground wine cellar.
They hurry down the steep steps. The air grows cooler with every level they descend. It smells of aged oak and damp earth.
Anissa approaches the cellar's heavy ventilation grate. It is a structural flaw she discovered during her first week of miserable, agonizing isolation in this house.
Ashanti produces a small multi-tool from her pocket. She quickly unscrews the rusted bolts. Anissa keeps watch at the stairwell door, her muscles coiled tight.
The metal grate swings open with a faint squeak. Anissa squeezes through the narrow shaft. The rough iron scrapes her elbow. Skin tears. She ignores the sharp sting.
Ashanti slides through immediately after her. She pulls the grate back into place, hiding their exit route perfectly.
They drop into the dense, thorny bushes of the estate's outer gardens. The distant sounds of D. C. traffic call to them. It sounds like a siren song.
Anissa sprints across the manicured lawn. She uses the long shadows of the ancient oak trees to avoid the sweeping perimeter spotlights. Her blood rushes in her ears.
Ashanti vaults over the ten-foot wrought iron fence with terrifying agility. She lands silently on the public sidewalk.
Anissa climbs over slightly slower. Her hands grip the cold metal. She drops down. A massive rush of adrenaline hits her bloodstream as her boots hit the city pavement.
They walk rapidly away from the wealthy Georgetown enclave. They head toward a bustling, neon-lit commercial district.
Anissa pulls her hood down. She takes a deep breath of the polluted but wonderfully free city air. A genuine, unrestrained smile breaks across her face. Her cheeks ache from it.
As they enter a crowded pedestrian square, the noise washes over them. Anissa notices a large crowd gathering near a fountain. A woman is crying loudly into a microphone.
Anissa pushes through the onlookers. She sees a woman holding a stack of medical bills.
"Please," the woman, Misty, sobs. "My father, Roy, is dying. We can't afford his treatments."
Roy lies groaning on a cheap cot beside her, covered in a thin blanket.
Anissa narrows her eyes. She looks closer. She spots the pristine, expensive designer sneakers Roy is wearing under the frayed edge of the blanket. The leather is spotless. The logo is unmistakable.
Disgust flares in Anissa's chest. Her Navajo upbringing taught her to protect the community. This manipulation makes her blood boil.
Anissa steps forward. She points directly at the cot.
"If he's truly dying in poverty, why are his shoes completely spotless, looking newer than anything I own?" Anissa says loudly. Her voice cuts through the crowd. "Those shoes look like they get better care than he does. And those medical bills you're waving around? The paper is crisp, not a single crease or tear from being handled in a panic."
Misty panics. Her face flushes red. She drops the microphone. She lunges forward, attempting to shove Anissa away to protect the heavy donation bucket.
Ashanti instantly intercepts. She grabs Misty's wrist with a bone-crushing grip.
Misty shrieks in pain. She drops the bucket. Coins and crumpled bills spill everywhere across the concrete.
The crowd realizes they have been duped. Angry shouts erupt. People step forward, demanding their money back.
Roy scrambles up from the cot, miraculously cured. He and Misty flee down the street, shoving past the angry pedestrians.
The crowd cheers for Anissa. But amidst the chaotic noise, Anissa feels a sudden, sharp prickle on the back of her neck. The hairs on her arms stand up.
She turns slowly.
A tall man in a tailored suit is standing in the entrance of a dark alleyway. He is watching her intently. His eyes are locked onto her face.
Anissa's breath catches in her throat.
The Tyrant's Cage: Escaping My Cruel Husband
Victoria
Modern
Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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Chapter 11
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Chapter 12
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Chapter 13
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Chapter 14
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Chapter 15
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Chapter 16
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Chapter 17
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Chapter 18
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Chapter 19
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Chapter 20
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