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The Imprisoned Wife's Secret Empire

Chapter 3 No.3

Word Count: 791    |    Released on: Today at 18:47

Cole

ation of everything I already felt, a cold, hard stamp

een delivered after she was already gone, leaving me with no one to co

you okay? Yo

roke the silence. He ha

my room, and lock the door. As I tried to stand, a sharp, pulling pain sh

breath. *Don't let her get to you,* I told mys

arm, his voice tight with a sudden, unfamiliar p

tle tired." I didn't have the energy to fight, to show h

ont of me. He was trying, in his own clumsy way, to fix things. "I'm sorry.

he question came out before I could stop it, flat an

tion that deep down, he knew something was wrong, but he had already chosen his si

through the qu

pure terror that came from outsid

Olivia'

m his face. His body reacted before his mind could, a pri

heart hammered against my ribs as I struggled to

ion. Her hair was a mess, her face streaked with tear

ing his arms. "Daisy!" she shrieked, her voic

belief. "What are you talking

obbed, her fists beating weakly against his chest. "I turned m

member I existed. He pushed past Olivia and ran, his long legs eating up

'd ever spoken. It was a brutal, visceral disp

forg

e twisting agony in my heart. The house staff, drawn by the commotion,

f to move. I was worried about the little girl, a child I didn't even know. But

own the sloping lawn toward the

st to

hered dock. And in the center of them, I saw Ethan. He was kneeli

sound no human shoul

od frozen at a distance, the last pers

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The Imprisoned Wife's Secret Empire
The Imprisoned Wife's Secret Empire
“I was pregnant with my first child, living what I thought was a peaceful life as the wife of a wealthy CEO. Then my husband's ex-fiancée, Olivia, brought her daughter to visit our estate. She moved through my home like she still owned it-pouring his tea from memory, laughing over old stories I'd never been part of. I watched from the edges of my own living room while they rebuilt their past, brick by brick, shutting me outside. Then her daughter wandered down to the lake. By the time I made it to the water's edge-pregnant, slow, the last to arrive-Ethan was already kneeling on the dock, lifting a small, limp body from the dark water. Olivia's scream split the afternoon. And then she turned on me. "You pushed her. You were jealous. You killed my daughter." My husband, the man who had held me hours earlier and promised our son would be a star, looked me in the eye- And said nothing. His silence was the verdict. The police believed her. His mother believed her. The staff looked at me like I was already in handcuffs. I had no alibi they wanted to hear, no voice they wanted to listen to. Just a swollen belly and a name that no longer felt like mine. Then my newborn son, Noah, caught a fever. Ethan let Olivia give him a "natural herbal remedy"-some old family recipe she swore by. I begged him to take Noah to the hospital. He locked me out of the nursery instead. Noah died of respiratory failure hours later. The doctor said if we'd arrived two hours sooner, he would have lived. Instead of grieving with me, Ethan blamed me for both deaths. He claimed Olivia was now barren from the trauma I caused. He locked me in a boarded-up room in the abandoned west wing and told me I would carry his next heir as my "atonement." "You owe us a child." I couldn't understand how my husband could be so blind-how a man who once whispered promises into my hair could look at me like livestock-until I started noticing the gaps in his life. The phone call he silenced when he thought I wasn't looking. The business partners whose names never appeared on any letterhead. The way his mother's charitable foundation seemed to have unlimited funds and zero public donors. This family wasn't just rich. They were buried in something. And Olivia wasn't just a jealous ex. She was inside their machine, a debt I didn't understand yet. But I understood enough to stop crying. Using smuggled napkins and a piece of charcoal, I began sketching under the alias "Phoenix." If Ethan wanted an heir, I would give him one-while building a fashion empire from my cell, buying back my freedom one design at a time, and burning his entire blood-soaked legacy to the ground. He thought he'd locked up a broken wife. He had no idea he'd just created his own destroyer.”