Elliana POV:
The world outside the hospital room continued its chaotic spin, oblivious to the chasm that had opened in my life. I was still weak, the physical pain a dull echo of the agony in my soul. Every breath felt like an effort, every movement a reminder of what I had lost. But beneath the exhaustion, a simmering rage began to crystallize into resolve.
Cruz Pennington, my quiet rescuer, had become a constant, reassuring presence. He brought me water, adjusted my pillows, and simply sat in silence when words failed me. He didn't ask about my past, and I didn't offer. But in his steady gaze, I found a reflection of my own burgeoning strength.
One morning, as I struggled to sit up, the nurse mentioned another visitor. "Your husband, Mr. Cohen, is here."
My blood ran cold. Britton. After everything, he dared to show his face. I wanted to scream, to lash out, but I simply nodded. I needed to see him, to understand the depth of his depravity.
He walked in, looking impeccably dressed, a stark contrast to my hospital gown and bruised face. His eyes, though, held a flicker of something I couldn't quite decipher-pity? Guilt? It didn't matter.
"Elliana," he said, his voice soft, almost tender. The sound made my skin crawl. "I heard about the accident. I'm so sorry."
"Sorry?" I repeated, my voice raspy. "Sorry for what, Britton? For leaving me to die? For the miscarriage? For orchestrating my downfall?"
His face stiffened. "Don't be ridiculous. I would never hurt you. The accident was... a terrible coincidence." He stepped closer, reaching for my hand.
I pulled away, recoiling from his touch as if burned. "Don't you dare touch me. You left me bleeding on the side of the road, Britton. You drove our car off a cliff. You planned this." The words were an accusation, a raw wound ripped open.
He recoiled as well, his eyes wide. "That's not true! I was trying to save Baylee. She was being threatened. And when you called, I heard... I heard a scream. I thought you were with the kidnappers." His voice was rising now, a desperate attempt to cover his tracks.
"A scream?" I scoffed, a bitter laugh escaping my lips. "You heard Baylee's giggle. And then you heard my scream as I plummeted into the ocean. Don't lie to me, Britton. Not anymore."
His face paled. He knew I knew. The mask slipped, revealing a flicker of panic. "Elliana, please. We can fix this. I know things have been difficult. But we're married. We can start over."
"Start over?" I laughed, a hollow, mirthless sound. "You want to start over after you destroyed my career, ruined my reputation, caused me to lose our child, and left me for dead? What part of that says 'start over', Britton?"
He stood there, seemingly at a loss for words, his polished facade cracking. "I... I made mistakes. I was misguided. Baylee manipulated me. But I tried to find you. I sent out search parties. I was worried sick."
"Worried sick?" I said, shaking my head. "You were worried sick about getting caught. You were worried sick about your image. Don't insult my intelligence."
Just then, my assistant, Sarah, rushed in, her face pale. "Elliana, Ms. Cohen is here. Ernestine. She's demanding to see you."
My heart sank. Ernestine. Britton's mother. The viper who always hated me. Her presence now was a fresh hell.
Britton's expression hardened. "Tell her I'll be out in a moment." He turned back to me. "Elliana, let's talk about this later. When you're calmer."
"Calmer?" I wanted to throw something at him, to tear his perfect suit. "The only calm I'll find is when you're out of my life, Britton."
He sighed, a practiced gesture of exasperation. "I'll be back." He left the room, his footsteps echoing ominously.
A few moments later, a shrill, arrogant voice pierced the quiet of the hallway. "So, the little orphan girl finally falls from grace. I always knew she was trash."
Ernestine. Her words, like shards of glass, confirmed my worst fears. She was here to gloat.
I closed my eyes, taking a deep, shaky breath. This was it. The final act of humiliation. But I was done playing their game. I was done being the victim.
Cruz walked in then, his presence a calm counterpoint to the storm brewing outside. He looked at me, a silent question in his eyes.
"I need to get out of here," I whispered, barely audible. "Now."
He nodded, already moving with purpose. "I'll arrange it." He didn't ask where, or why. He just acted.
My body screamed in protest as I tried to stand, but the resolve in my heart was stronger. Britton, Ernestine, Baylee. They had pushed me to the edge, but they had also ignited a fire. This was rock bottom. From here, there was only one way to go. Up. And they would regret the day they thought they could extinguish Elliana Sparks.
I looked at Cruz, a silent promise forming between us. I would heal. I would rebuild. And then, I would make them pay. The divorce papers, signed years ago as a twisted symbol of trust, now felt like my only salvation. Britton thought he was free, but I was about to reclaim my freedom, and with it, half of everything he held dear.
This wasn't just about survival anymore. This was about vengeance.
"I need my legal team," I told Cruz, my voice firm despite the tremor in my hands. "And I need everything Britton Cohen owns." My heart, once broken, was now forged in ice.
Elliana POV:
The world outside the hospital was a whirlwind of flashing lights and shouted accusations. My name, once synonymous with integrity, was now dragged through the mud, twisted into a cautionary tale. I lay in the sterile white bed, a shell of my former self, my body aching, my heart a hollow space where hope once resided.
Britton had been gone for days, probably back to his perfect life, while I battled for my own. The media, fueled by his carefully planted leaks, had painted me as a manipulative, dishonest journalist who fabricated sources and attacked innocent interns. Baylee, of course, was the poor victim, her staged suicide attempt a masterful stroke of villainy.
I scrolled through my phone, a morbid curiosity guiding my numb fingers. Social media was ablaze. Baylee, the "innocent victim," had posted a photo: her hand, small and delicate, intertwined with Britton's. On her ring finger, gleaming brightly, was my wedding ring. The one Britton had given me. The one I had worn for years. It was a crude, blatant act of territorial marking.
A guttural sound escaped me, a mix of rage and despair. I deleted her from every platform, blocked her number, purged her from my digital existence. It was a small act of defiance, but it felt like reclaiming a piece of myself.
My assistant, Sarah, arrived, her face etched with worry. "Elliana, the divorce papers... they've been served."
A cold satisfaction settled in my chest. "Good. Send them to him. Overnight delivery. I want him to know it's real."
She looked at me, surprised. "You're serious?"
"Never been more serious." My voice was flat, devoid of emotion.
Later that afternoon, Cruz helped me pack the few belongings I still had at the penthouse. It felt like walking through a museum of a life that was no longer mine. Every object, every piece of furniture, whispered of Britton. His taste, his preferences, his comfort. I realized with a sickening lurch that I had slowly, imperceptibly, disappeared into him. My books were relegated to a dusty corner, my art pieces replaced by his, my clothes mirroring his expectations. I had become an echo, a shadow.
My fingers brushed against a framed photo on my bedside table: a younger Britton and me, laughing, our arms around each other, standing in front of the rundown foster home where we grew up. We were just kids then, clinging to each other, promising to face the world together. He was my protector, my confidant, my everything.
I remembered the day he told me he wanted to be a lawyer, to fight for justice. I, in turn, vowed to be a journalist, to expose the truth. We were a team, a force against the unfairness of the world. I remembered him saving me from bullies, shielding me with his small body. He was my rock, my first love, my only family.
Now, he was the enemy, the one who had shattered the very foundation of my being.
With a trembling hand, I picked up the photo. My fingers traced his smiling face, then mine. The innocence, the hope, the fierce devotion. It was all gone. I tore the picture in half, tearing through his smile, tearing through mine. The sound ripped through the quiet room, a final, visceral act of severance.
That evening, a formal invitation arrived. It was from Ernestine Rasmussen Cohen, Britton' s mother, for the annual Cohen family charity gala. A subtle smirk played on my lips. She wanted to humiliate me publicly, to revel in my downfall. But she had forgotten one crucial detail. I was still Mrs. Cohen, at least for a little while longer. The pre-nuptial agreement, drafted meticulously by Britton himself, was my trump card. It guaranteed me control of Veritas and half of his fortune. He had given me a weapon, never thinking I' d use it.
I might be broken, but I wasn't out.
The ballroom glittered with the city's elite, a sea of diamonds and designer gowns. I walked in, head held high, a ghost in a black dress, my face carefully blank. The murmurs started, hushed whispers and pointed stares. I ignored them, my gaze sweeping the room until it landed on Britton.
He stood by Ernestine, their heads close, both smiling. And next to him, radiant in a shimmering blue gown, was Baylee, my wedding ring prominently displayed on her hand. She looked like a princess, a trophy wife in waiting. My stomach clenched, a cold wave washing over me.
I moved through the crowd, greeting old acquaintances with detached professionalism, until I stood before Ernestine. "Mrs. Cohen," I said, my voice sweet as poison. "Lovely evening, isn't it?" I presented her with a small, exquisitely wrapped gift-a rare vintage brooch I knew she coveted.
Her smile faltered, her eyes narrowing. "Elliana. I didn't expect you to show your face." Her voice dripped with disdain. "After everything, you still have the audacity?"
"Audacity?" I arched a brow. "I'm merely fulfilling my social duties as your daughter-in-law, Ernestine."
She scoffed, her gaze raking over me. "Daughter-in-law? Please. You're a disgrace. A fraud. And barren, to boot. You couldn't even give my son an heir." Her words were a calculated strike, aimed at my most painful wound. I instinctively touched my still-tender abdomen, a phantom ache blooming.
Baylee, clinging to Britton's arm, piped up, her voice falsely demure. "Mrs. Cohen is right, Elliana. Britton deserves so much more."
Britton, silent beside them, didn't defend me. He never did anymore. I remembered when he used to shield me fiercely from his mother' s barbs, his hand a comforting presence on my back. Now, his silence was a deafening roar of complicity.
"Perhaps he does," I said, my gaze locking onto Baylee's. "But what he 'deserves' and what he 'gets' are two very different things."
Just then, Baylee's phone rang. Her face, usually so composed, went pale as she answered. Her eyes darted around, fear flickering in them. "What? No! It can't be!" she cried, her voice rising in panic. She dropped the phone, clutching her head, and then, dramatically, she sank to her knees, looking up at me, tears streaming down her face.
"Elliana! Please! I beg you!" she wailed, her voice echoing through the suddenly hushed ballroom. "Don't hurt my family! I'll do anything!"
The scene was pure melodrama, designed to implicate me, to paint me as the villain. But Britton, ever the savior, rushed to her side.
"What is it, Baylee? What happened?" he asked, his voice full of concern.
"She... she kidnapped my sister! She threatened to harm my parents!" Baylee shrieked, pointing a trembling finger at me. "Elliana, please, I'm so sorry! I retract everything, just let my family go!"
The crowd gasped, their eyes turning to me, horror and disgust etched on their faces. Britton, his face contorted with rage, looked at me, then back at Baylee, his protectiveness overriding any hint of doubt. "Elliana, what have you done?!" he roared, his voice shaking the crystal chandeliers. "How could you?!"
His words, his unquestioning accusation, were the final nail in the coffin of our love. He still believed her. Even after everything, he still chose her, chose to condemn me without a second thought. The coldness in my heart solidified. This was it. The ultimate betrayal. My only response was a chilling, empty stare.
Elliana POV:
Baylee's performance was Oscar-worthy. Her trembling finger, her tear-streaked face, her desperate pleas echoing through the hushed ballroom-all perfectly choreographed to paint me as a monster. The crowd' s horrified gasps were a symphony of condemnation. Britton, his face a mask of primal rage, roared his accusation.
"Elliana, what have you done?! How could you?!"
His fury was a physical force, but it no longer swayed me. My heart had hardened into a stone. "You want to know what I've done, Britton?" I asked, my voice dangerously calm, cutting through the stunned silence. "I've done nothing but expose the truth, a truth you refuse to see. And now, you're accusing me of kidnapping based on her lies?" I gestured to Baylee, who clung to Britton, still sobbing. "Where is your proof?"
Just as Britton opened his mouth to retort, Baylee let out a dramatic gasp and slumped in his arms, her eyes fluttering shut. "Baylee! Baylee!" Britton cried, his rage instantly replaced by frantic concern. He scooped her up, cradling her like a fragile doll. "Someone call an ambulance!"
He pushed through the stunned crowd, Baylee's limp form in his arms, his eyes never once straying to mine. He was gone, abandoning me to the wolves. Again.
Ernestine, however, was not so quick to leave. Her eyes, filled with vitriol, burned into mine. "You absolute filth!" she hissed, her manicured hand flying across my face. The sharp sting of her slap was a welcome jolt, a physical pain that momentarily eclipsed the emotional one. "You think you can get away with this, you little foster brat? Threatening Baylee's family? You'll pay for this!"
Before I could even register the words, two burly men in black suits grabbed my arms, their grip like iron. Ernestine gestured towards the back of the ballroom, a malevolent smirk twisting her lips. "Take her to the pagoda. Teach her a lesson about disrespecting this family."
I struggled, but their strength was overwhelming. "You can't do this!" I spat, my voice laced with defiance. "I'm still your daughter-in-law! I'll sue you! I'll expose you!"
Ernestine merely laughed, a short, sharp bark. "Oh, darling, your threats mean nothing now. Your 'celebrated' career is in tatters, and your husband wouldn't lift a finger to save you. You are nothing."
They dragged me through hushed corridors, past ornate tapestries and priceless artwork, until we reached a secluded, dimly lit pagoda in the sprawling estate gardens. It was a place of meditation, a sanctuary. Tonight, it would be my torture chamber.
They strapped me to a wooden pillar, my wrists and ankles bound tightly. My legal knowledge, my sharp mind, felt useless against raw, brute force. One of the men approached, a sinister smile on his face, holding a small, silver needle. My heart pounded against my ribs.
"This is for your insolence," he murmured, his voice chillingly calm.
Panic, cold and sharp, pierced through my anger. "What are you doing?!"
Ernestine appeared in the doorway, her face illuminated by the faint light, a chilling rictus of triumph. "Oh, just a little family tradition, dear. A reminder of humility." She nodded to the man. "Start with the pinky finger. And make sure she feels every exquisite moment."
The world blurred. A searing pain, unlike anything I had ever known, exploded in my pinky finger as the needle pierced beneath the nail. I screamed, a raw, primal sound ripped from the depths of my being. My body convulsed, a desperate attempt to escape the agony. Tears streamed down my face, not of sorrow, but of sheer, unadulterated torment.
They continued, finger by finger, each puncture a fresh wave of blinding pain. My screams tore through the night, but no one came. I saw Ernestine' s silhouette in the doorway, watching, savoring my suffering. My vision swam, the ornate carvings of the pagoda twisting into grotesque faces. I vaguely heard the muffled sounds of the gala, the distant strains of music, a cruel counterpoint to my agony.
Britton. He knew. He had to know. But he was gone, playing the doting hero to his manipulative intern. The betrayal was so profound, so absolute, it hollowed me out even further.
Time lost all meaning. When the last needle was withdrawn, my fingers were mangled, bloody messes, throbbing with an unbearable ache. My body was slick with sweat, trembling uncontrollably. My breath came in ragged gasps. I was dimly aware of cold water being splashed over my face, snapping me back to a brutal reality.
"Get her cleaned up," Ernestine commanded, her voice devoid of any emotion. "And make sure she remembers this lesson."
Rough hands pulled me from the pillar, my limbs feeling like lead. I was dragged to a small utility room, stripped, hosed down with cold water, and dressed in a simple, coarse cotton dress. My dignity, already in tatters, was further stripped away.
"You're lucky to be leaving here in one piece," a young maid sneered, her eyes filled with contempt, as she roughly brushed my hair. "This is what happens when you cross the Cohen family."
"Don't worry, I won't forget," I mumbled, my voice hoarse, my fingers throbbing with agonizing pain. The taste of blood filled my mouth.
They led me out to a waiting car, my body a puppet on strings. Every step was a fresh agony. My spirit, however, remained unbroken. They had tried to break me, but they had only forged me stronger.
"Elliana!"
A familiar voice, sharp with urgency, cut through the night. The car door opened, and Britton stood there, his eyes flashing with a possessive anger. He looked disheveled, his tie loose, his hair mussed. He grabbed my arm, his grip bruising.
"Where were you?!" he demanded, his voice a low growl. "I've been looking for you. Get in."
He pulled me roughly into his luxury car, ignoring my pained grunt. "We need to go to the hospital. Baylee's family is still missing. She thinks you're behind it."
My mind, dulled by pain, reeled. Baylee's family, still missing? This was a new layer to her intricate web of lies. And Britton, still her pawn, still her protector. The utter absurdity of it all.
I was too weak to protest, too numb to fight. The car sped off, the city lights blurring into streaks of color. He talked, frantically, about Baylee, about his concern, about how I needed to apologize. His words were a distant hum, meaningless.
Suddenly, his phone rang. A frantic ringtone, then Baylee's panicked voice screaming through the speaker. "Britton! They've found my family! But... but they've been hurt! They're saying... they're saying she did it! Elliana! She kidnapped them, Britton! She tried to kill them!"
Britton slammed on the brakes, the tires screeching, throwing me forward. He turned to me, his eyes blazing with a cold, terrifying fury. "Elliana, what have you done?! How could you go this far?!" He grabbed my shoulders, shaking me. "Did you kidnap Baylee's family?"
I stared at him, my face expressionless, my eyes devoid of all feeling. My bloody, mangled fingers pulsed with agony. My body was a raw canvas of pain, my soul a wasteland. But in that wasteland, a seed of pure, unadulterated hatred began to sprout. He had truly become my enemy. He had abandoned me, allowed his mother to torture me, and now he was accusing me of a crime I didn't commit, all for the sake of his manipulative intern.
I said nothing. Just stared. My silence was my only weapon now. And it was deafening.