Elisa POV:
Joette' s stare felt like a physical weight, pressing down on me, dissecting me. Her eyes narrowed, lingering on my face for what felt like an eternity. A cold, calculating smile slowly spread across her lips. It wasn't a smile of amusement, but of contempt.
"You ungrateful little wretch," she hissed, her voice low and dangerous. "After all we've done for you, this is how you repay us? Very well. You want your freedom? You can have it. But don't expect a single penny from us. You'll leave with nothing but the clothes on your back. The divorce papers will be finalized and delivered by tomorrow noon. Consider yourself banished from this family, from this city. And if you ever dare to breathe a word of this... unpleasantness... to anyone, you will regret it more than you can possibly imagine."
She snatched a thick envelope from her purse and flung it at me. It landed with a soft thud on the bed, just missing my face. I flinched, but quickly picked it up, my fingers trembling slightly. It was a pre-signed nullification of our ironclad prenuptial agreement, prepared in anticipation of my 'problem.'
I traced the elegant script, the words blurring through the sudden rush of tears. Tears of relief, tears of pain, tears for the life I had lost and the life I was about to gain. I took a deep, shaky breath, letting the clean, sterile air fill my lungs. Freedom. It was a bitter taste, but it was mine. I would survive this. I would build a new future, far away from the Donovans.
Just then, the door burst open. Kiyoshi stood there, his hair disheveled, his eyes wild. He snatched my phone from the bedside table. "What the hell is going on, Elisa? Why didn't you answer my calls? Why is Grandmother here?" He glanced briefly at the divorce papers in my hand, then back at me, his eyes filled with a mixture of anger and something I couldn't quite decipher. "Are you milking this little incident for sympathy? Do you think a miscarriage will make me soft? Is that your game, Elisa?"
He stood there, still in the tailored suit from last night's party, his tie loosened, a faint smudge of lipstick on his collar. His face was a mask of disdain, his eyes sweeping over my hospital gown, my pale face, my bandaged wrist. Heidi Ray, dressed in a flimsy silk robe, peeked from behind him, a smirk playing on her lips.
"Oh, look who's finally decided to show her face," Heidi purred, stepping out from behind Kiyoshi. "Still trying to cling to him, are we? Honestly, Elisa, what do you have left to offer? You're damaged goods now, aren't you? No child, no future. Just a bitter, barren woman. Kiyoshi needs an heir, not a ghost."
I felt a strange sense of detachment. Their words, designed to wound, barely registered. I had seen countless women like Heidi in Kiyoshi's life. They came and went, each one a fleeting distraction, a prop in his elaborate charade of disdain. They were all so eager, so confident that they would be the one to finally tame the wild Donovan heir. I wondered, with a morbid curiosity, if Heidi truly believed she would be the next Mrs. Donovan.
"Are you going to marry her, Kiyoshi?" I asked, my voice calm, almost conversational. The question hung in the air, a subtle challenge.
Kiyoshi's movements faltered. His hand, still clutching my phone, froze mid-air. He turned to me, a peculiar expression on his face. Then, a slow, mocking smile spread across his lips. "Marry her? Darling, don't be ridiculous. You are my wife. And you will always be my wife. Remember our vows, Elisa? 'Till death do us part.' You're stuck with me."
I remembered our vows. I remembered the depth of his eyes, the sincerity in his voice, the weight of his promises. He had sworn to cherish me, to protect me, to love me until his last breath. Now, his words were a cruel parody of those sacred promises. I could feel the malice radiating from him, a chilling wave washing over me. He wasn't trying to reconcile. He was trying to inflict pain, to break me all over again.
"You can't say you don't love me," he whispered, his eyes narrowing, searching mine for a flicker of the old devotion. "Not after everything we've been through. Not after all your sacrifices, your endless devotion. You love me, Elisa. You're just trying to punish me."
I met his gaze, my own eyes clear and devoid of any emotion he could recognize. I had spent years dissecting his every word, every look, searching for the love I once believed in. Now, I saw only the twisted reflection of his own pain, his own bitterness. A single, misspoken word, a lie carefully planted by his grandmother, had festered and poisoned everything. It had turned his love into a weapon, wielded against me for years. It was a cruel irony, a brutal joke played by fate.
"I don't love you, Kiyoshi," I stated, my voice flat, final, leaving no room for doubt. "Not anymore."
Elisa POV:
I remembered the first time Kiyoshi cheated on me. It wasn't with a Heidi Ray, but with a quiet, unassuming intern from his company. I had found them in his office, his hand resting on her back, just as he had done with Heidi. I had cried then, my body wracked with sobs, my pleas for him to come back ringing hollow in the silent office.
When I was eight months pregnant, bloated and aching, I had traveled halfway across the world to find him. He was holed up in a secluded villa in the South of France, surrounded by a rotating cast of women. He'd looked at me, my swollen belly, my tear-streaked face, with utter indifference. He hadn't bothered to hide the silk scarf belonging to his latest conquest, draped carelessly over a chair in the living room.
"What are you doing here, Elisa?" he'd asked, his voice devoid of warmth. "Didn't you get the message? You're just a Donovan wife, a pretty face to sit beside me at galas. You're not meant to follow me around like a desperate puppy." He'd even ordered me to kneel, to fetch champagne for his mistress, to watch as he kissed her, openly, brazenly, in front of me. The humiliation had been a physical blow, worse than any slap.
That night, after a screaming match fueled by my desperation and his cruelty, I'd stumbled. A misstep on the grand marble staircase, my body tumbling down, an agonizing blur of pain. I remembered the sharp crack as I hit the bottom stair, the searing pain in my abdomen, and the sudden, terrifying gush of blood.
Eight months pregnant, and I was bleeding out. Alone.
I remembered the flurry of doctors, the panicked nurses, the blur of sterile white walls. They' d handed me one emergency consent form after another, each one carrying the terrifying phrase, "life-threatening condition." Kiyoshi never came. Not once. Not to hold my hand, not to offer a word of comfort, not even to sign the papers for the emergency C-section. I signed them myself, my hand shaking, my vision swimming, praying, begging, pleading with a God I wasn't sure existed to save my child.
They saved her. They pulled my daughter, Luna, from my body, tiny and fragile, her cries a faint whisper in the operating room. But I never got to hold her. Joette was there, her face grim. She snatched Luna from the nurse's arms, before I could even glimpse her face. "A girl," she'd stated, her voice heavy with disappointment. "You will try again, Elisa. For a son."
I spent my recovery not in the warmth of a nursery, but in the cold, cavernous Donovan family ancestral hall. Weeks after my emergency surgery, barely able to sit up, I was dragged before the family altar, the rich scent of incense filling my nostrils, mingling with the bitter taste of the traditional Chinese medicine Joette forced down my throat.
"Kneel, Elisa," Joette commanded, her voice like a whip. "You have failed this family. You have failed to secure the lineage. You will kneel here, every day, until a son is born. And you will pray for forgiveness." She pointed to Kiyoshi's portrait, hanging prominently on the wall. "Kiyoshi is a man, Elisa. Men have needs. We do not question his entertainment. Your duty is to provide an heir. And you will provide a son. I have arranged for the best traditional doctors to ensure your body is ready."
Kiyoshi himself, when he finally returned, offered no comfort. He just stood there, watching me, his eyes cold and distant. Later, at a family dinner, he' d leaned over, his voice low enough for only me to hear. "Look at you," he'd sneered, his gaze raking over my healing body. "Stretch marks, saggy skin. You're a mess, Elisa. Heidi has the body of a goddess. Maybe you should take lessons from her, on how to please a man." He' d said it loudly enough for the servants to hear, for the whispers to start. The media, of course, picked up on it. My humiliation was complete. My dignity, my very being, was trampled underfoot.
Elisa POV:
That was the moment. That was the last shred of my heart that died. Kiyoshi' s words, the coldness in Luna' s eyes, Joette' s relentless cruelty-it all solidified into an unyielding resolve. I wasn't staying for love. Love was a fragile thing, easily broken, and mine had long since turned to dust. I was staying for leverage, for a chance at freedom.
I wouldn't play his games anymore. The submissive wife, the heartbroken victim-that Elisa was gone. Kiyoshi' s smug smile faltered, then vanished completely. His eyes narrowed, a dangerous glint appearing in their depths. He lunged, his hand wrapping around my throat, pushing me back against the hospital bed. The fresh incision from my hysterectomy screamed in protest, a sharp, burning pain spreading through my abdomen. I felt the familiar warmth of blood seeping through the bandage.
My IV line, still attached to my hand, snagged on the bedframe, pulling taut. The needle ripped free, leaving a thin trail of blood welling up on my skin. He didn't even notice. He just stared at me, his face contorted with rage.
"How dare you say that?" he snarled, his voice a low growl. "How dare you pretend you don't love me? After everything, Elisa, you still think I'm a fool? You only care about money, don't you? You sold yourself to my grandmother, you sold your dignity for a life of luxury! Don't deny it!"
He pulled out his phone, his thumb swiping rapidly. A video flashed on the screen, a private moment, a humiliating memory. "Look at this, Elisa," he commanded, forcing the phone close to my face. "Look at yourself. Begging. Crying. Telling me you'd do anything to win me back. Was that a performance too? Was that all for show? Why, Elisa? Why would you pretend to love me if it wasn't real? Tell me! Tell me why you dared to say you don't love me!"
Heidi, who had been hovering nervously in the doorway, flinched back at his outburst, her face pale with fright. I just smiled, a small, sad smile that didn't reach my eyes. He was so utterly, hopelessly deluded. So convinced of his own narrative, his own pain.
He thought he knew me. He thought he knew what made me tick, what would break me. He believed his own lies, the convenient story that I was a gold-digger, a mercenary, bought and paid for by his grandmother. He couldn't fathom the truth: that I had loved him, truly and deeply, and that his cruelty had systematically dismantled every ounce of that love.
I remembered the day I first brought up divorce, years ago, after his first public affair. I had been heartbroken, but still clinging to a sliver of hope. The entire Donovan family had descended upon me, a phalanx of disapproving faces. "You will not leave Kiyoshi," Joette had declared, her voice cold and unyielding. "You are his wife. You will bear his children. This family does not entertain such foolishness."
Kiyoshi had smirked, a cruel glint in his eyes. He hadn't wanted me to leave. He wanted me to stay, to suffer, to be his constant reminder of what he believed was my betrayal. My acceptance letter to the prestigious architectural program abroad, painstakingly earned, had been ripped to shreds by Joette, right in front of me. "Your place is here, Elisa," she' d said, the torn paper fluttering to the ground like discarded dreams. "With your husband. You will fulfill your duties as a Donovan wife. You will have no other life, no other dreams, no other joys or sorrows, but those we dictate." My future, my passion, my very identity-all stripped away, piece by agonizing piece.