Audrey Wallace POV:
I woke up to the distant hum of the house, a sterile quiet that felt wrong. The blinding white ceiling of my bedroom stared down at me. My body ached with a dull, persistent throbbing, but the blood was gone. Someone had cleaned me up. Jake. It had to be Jake.
Jake stood at the foot of my bed, his face pale, eyes shadowed. He had dismissed his fleeting suspicion, I knew. Elliot? Nonsense. A hallucination from pain. He' d always dismissed anything that didn't fit his narrow, amnesiac view of the world. He preferred to believe Jada's carefully crafted narrative, the one where I was the villain.
His gaze was cold again. "You are my legal wife, Audrey. A contractual obligation. Nothing more, nothing less. And you will remain so." His voice was flat, devoid of the earlier confusion. "Don't ever mention that name again. Or any other name from a past that doesn't exist for me."
He paused, a calculated glint in his eyes. "Behave, and your family's logistics empire, the one I've been investing in and subtly expanding for you, will continue to thrive. Disobey, and you will lose everything. Understood?"
I turned my head away, my jaw clenched. I wouldn't give him the satisfaction of a response. My silence was my only weapon now.
My heart clung to a single, burning hope: the car my father had arranged would be here soon. My escape. Real. Imminent.
Five years. Five years of this living hell. The casual cruelty, the dismissive words, the physical and emotional abuse. Each passing day had chipped away at my spirit, eroding the vibrant woman I once was. The pain was a constant companion, a dull ache that never truly subsided. I had endured it all, clinging to the phantom of a love he couldn't remember.
But that phantom was gone. Replaced by a monster.
I was done. Utterly, irrevocably done.
Suddenly, Jake's phone rang. He glanced at the screen, a soft smile touching his lips. It was Jada. He answered, his voice immediately softening.
"Jakey, darling!" Jada's voice, shrill and tearful, cut through the phone. "The baby! Something's wrong! She's bleeding! Audrey must have done this! She's always been so jealous!"
Jake's face hardened. He slammed the phone down. His eyes, now blazing with a terrifying rage, fixed on me. "You demon!" he roared. He yanked me from the bed, my still-tender skin screaming in protest. "What did you do?!"
He dragged me, half-dressed, out of the house and shoved me into his car. He drove like a maniac, tires screeching, leaving a trail of rubber on the pavement. The silence between us was thick with his fury, and my own growing despair.
We arrived at the retreat in moments. Jada rushed out, her perfectly made-up face streaked with feigned tears. Her eyes, however, were triumphant as they met mine.
"You monster!" she shrieked, her hand flying to my face. Her nails raked across my cheek, leaving angry red marks. "How could you hurt my baby?!"
"I didn't do anything!" I cried, trying to push her away. "Check the surveillance cameras! I was in my study!"
Just then, a young woman, one of my employees, stumbled forward, her face pale and trembling. She dropped to her knees before Jake, sobbing. "Mr. Foster! It's true! I saw her! Ms. Wallace… she told me to do it!"
My blood ran cold. Betrayal.
"She said… she said she was so jealous of Ms. Floyd and her beautiful children," the employee wailed, her voice cracking. "She offered me a large sum of money to… to hurt the baby, just a little. To make it look like an accident. She said Ms. Floyd needed to know her place!"
My world spun. This was a nightmare. A carefully orchestrated, malicious nightmare. "That's a lie!" I screamed, my voice hoarse. "She's lying! I would never!"
But no one was listening. A crowd of customers, drawn by the commotion, had gathered. "Monster!" someone yelled. "How could she?!" Another shouted, "I want my money back! I can't believe I trusted her with my baby!"
Someone was live-streaming the whole thing. My phone buzzed with notifications. My retreat's social media accounts were being flooded with hate. Calls for boycotts. My business partner, the one who had just confirmed the transfer, called, his voice tight with panic. He was backing out. The deal was off. My escape route, my future, was crumbling before my eyes.
Jake, his face a mask of primal fury, gently took the injured baby from Jada's trembling arms. The infant's lip was swollen, a small cut visible. He stared at me, his eyes burning with an inferno of hatred. "You call yourself a woman?" he growled, his voice a chilling whisper. "You call yourself human?"
"She deserves to be punished, Jakey!" Jada cried, clinging to his arm. "She tried to hurt our baby!"
"Oh, she'll be punished," Jake said, his eyes never leaving mine. His voice dropped to a terrifying calm. "Bring me a needle and thread."
My blood ran cold. Dread, a suffocating blanket, descended upon me. "No," I whimpered, shaking my head. "Please, Jake, no."
But he wasn't listening. A security guard, always silently obeying, appeared with a needle and thick, black thread. Jake watched, his eyes devoid of mercy, as the guard grabbed my head, forcing my chin up. The first stitch. The needle pierced my lip, a sharp, excruciating pain. I screamed, but no sound came out. Only a ragged, tearing noise. Another stitch. And another. The thread wove through my flesh, pulling my lips together, sealing them shut. Tears streamed down my face, hot and agonizing. My mouth was a raw, bloody mess. My cries were reduced to guttural mumbles.
Blood bloomed on my pure white dress, a stark contrast against the fabric.
Jake watched, his expression unyielding. "Still not enough," he muttered, his voice cold. "She needs to see nothing. Hear nothing. Say nothing." He turned to the guard. "The eyes. The ears. Stitch them too."
My body convulsed, a silent scream trapped within my stitched lips. The guard hesitated, a flicker of horror in his eyes.
"Do it!" Jake roared, his voice cracking with fury. "She tried to hurt my child! She needs to understand that she will never speak, never see, never hear again if she dares to cross me! This is for trying to destroy my family! This is for trying to hurt my baby!"
A choked, gurgling sound escaped my stitched lips. It was a laugh. A broken, hysterical laugh. I thought of my past choices. My blind love. My foolish hope. My unwavering loyalty to a man who had forgotten me, replaced me, abused me.
I loved the wrong man. I loved him with everything I had. And he had broken me. Utterly. Completely.
Audrey POV:
The rusty needle hovered inches from my eye. My breath hitched, a pathetic, broken sound trapped in my throat.
Then, the world tore open.
A deafening roar ripped through the basement. The heavy iron door didn't just open; it disintegrated. The shockwave hit me like a physical blow. My body violently convulsed against the nylon straps. The sound took me straight back to the screeching tires and crushing metal of the car crash years ago. I couldn't stop the violent tremors shaking my bones.
Through the thick, choking cloud of C4 smoke, a figure stepped into the dim light.
Elliot.
He wore a tailored black trench coat. His expensive leather shoes crunched over the concrete rubble. It sounded like a countdown to an execution.
The guard who had been holding the needle was thrown against the load-bearing wall. He groaned, scrambling to pull a gun from his waistband.
He never made it.
The heavily armed bodyguards flanking Elliot opened fire. The shots were deafening in the enclosed space. The guard’s wrist exploded in a spray of crimson. He let out a piercing, pig-like squeal. Hot blood splattered across the concrete, landing inches from my bare feet.
I didn't blink. I didn't even flinch. I just stared at the red droplets.
Elliot’s cold eyes swept the room. They locked onto me. He saw the horrific acid burns covering my back. He saw the crude, swollen stitches on my face. He saw me strapped down like an animal waiting for slaughter.
His pupils shrank to pinpricks.
He crossed the room in three massive strides. He didn't bother with a knife. He grabbed the heavy-duty nylon straps binding my wrists and pulled. The veins in his hands bulged against his skin. The thick material snapped under his raw, violent strength. He had promised me years ago that he would never let anyone hurt me. I saw the absolute, devastating guilt in his eyes. He blamed himself for letting me walk into this marriage.
Without the straps holding me up, my ruined body pitched forward.
Elliot caught me. He gathered me into his chest, his movements incredibly gentle, treating me like fragile glass.
My empty gaze drifted over his shoulder. I stared at the bloody suture needle abandoned on the floor. My throat worked, but the only sound that came out was a hoarse, meaningless wheeze.
Elliot stripped off his trench coat. It was still warm from his body heat. He wrapped it tightly around my shivering frame, hiding my broken flesh from the world.
By the back door, the second guard tried to crawl away. One of Elliot’s men stepped forward and drove a combat boot through the man's knee. The bone snapped with a sickening crunch. The guard collapsed, screaming.
Elliot didn't even look back. "Break their hands," he ordered, his voice devoid of mercy. "Both of them."
Outside the basement, heavy footsteps echoed. The asylum's maximum-security red alarm finally triggered, shrieking through the halls.
A voice crackled over Elliot’s earpiece. The pilot. The roof extraction route was clear.
Elliot lowered his head. His lips brushed my ear. "The nightmare is over, Audrey," he whispered, his voice vibrating against my skin. "I've got you."
A single tear, mixed with blood from my cheek, slid down my face. The last ounce of my adrenaline vanished. The darkness rushed in, and I surrendered to it.
***
Jack POV:
The engine of my Aston Martin roared as I pushed it past a hundred and twenty miles per hour. The rain lashed against the windshield.
My car phone was connected to the asylum's security feed. The blaring sound of the red alarm echoed through the luxurious cabin, drilling into my skull.
I slammed my fist against the steering wheel. A suffocating, crushing panic gripped my chest. I couldn't breathe. Audrey was my caged canary. She was supposed to be sitting in that basement, learning her lesson. She couldn't leave. She belonged to me.
The asylum gates loomed in the headlights. I didn't hit the brakes. I rammed the heavy iron gates, the metal screeching as my car tore through them. The tires burned against the wet asphalt, filling the air with the stench of scorched rubber.
I threw the door open before the car even fully stopped.
The courtyard was a war zone. Security guards writhed on the ground, groaning in agony. Every single security camera had been blown to pieces.
I shoved past the chaos. My expensive leather shoes hit a puddle of bloody water, and I nearly slipped. I stumbled down the concrete stairs, my heart hammering against my ribs, rushing toward the basement.
I froze in the doorway.
The iron chair was empty.
Shredded nylon straps lay on the floor. Beneath the chair was a massive, blindingly bright puddle of fresh blood.
My eyes darted frantically around the room. They landed on a small, metallic object in the corner. A suture needle. It was coated in blood.
My brain completely short-circuited. A high-pitched ringing drowned out the wailing alarms. The world tilted on its axis.
I lunged forward and grabbed the collar of a guard bleeding out on the floor. His hands were a mangled mess of crushed bone.
"Where is she?!" I roared, my vision swimming with red. "Where is my wife?!"
The guard's eyes rolled back in pain. "Armed... armed men," he choked out, spitting blood. "They took her."
I hurled him back onto the concrete. The sheer, overwhelming powerlessness mixed with explosive rage. I turned and punched the concrete load-bearing wall. My knuckles split open. Blood dripped down my fingers.
I looked at the blood on my hands. The metallic smell of the room hit my throat. My stomach violently revolted. I leaned against the wall and dry-heaved, gasping for air.
My assistant ran into the basement, sweating through his suit. He held up a tablet. "Sir! An unmarked helicopter just took off from the roof!"
I snatched the tablet from his hands. I stared at the blinking red dot moving away on the radar screen. My jaw clenched so hard my teeth ached.
"Contact the FAA immediately. I want this airspace completely locked down!"
Audrey POV:
The massive blades of the custom Sikorsky helicopter sliced through the night wind. Inside the cabin, it was perfectly still. I couldn't feel the vibration of the engine.
I was lying face down on a mobile medical bed.
Elliot stood over me, his hands hovering, afraid to touch my ruined skin. He had carefully positioned me to avoid putting any pressure on the severe acid burns covering my back.
A team of elite private trauma doctors moved in. They used medical shears to cut away the remaining shreds of my clothes. The cold air hit my wounds, making my muscles twitch.
The ECG monitor next to my head beeped in a rapid, terrifying rhythm.
"Sir," the lead doctor whispered to Elliot, his voice tight. "She is in severe hemorrhagic shock. The infection from the burns is spreading fast. We need an OR immediately."
Elliot’s face was carved from granite. "Push the engines to the absolute limit. Fly straight to the Manhattan private hospital."
A wave of agonizing pain ripped through my nervous system. My consciousness flickered. The memory of the dark, damp basement crashed into my mind. The guard. The needle. The acid.
My body reacted before my brain could. I violently curled into a tight ball, trying to protect my face. I thrashed against the doctor trying to insert an IV.
"Stop touching her!" Elliot barked.
He waved the medical team back. He dropped to one knee beside the bed. He reached out and firmly grasped my uninjured left hand. His palm was large and incredibly warm.
I forced my eyes open halfway. The cabin lights were a blur. My lips parted. The torn edges of my mouth burned.
"Help..." I rasped, a pathetic, broken sound.
I didn't call for Jack. I didn't call for my husband. That part of me was dead.
Elliot’s chest hitched. He leaned down, pressing my hand against his cheek. I could feel the rigid tension in his jaw. He had watched me walk away from my family to marry a man beneath me, respecting my choice. Now, he was looking at the physical cost of my delusion.
"I'm here," Elliot whispered, his voice thick with a dangerous, protective vow. "I swear to God, Audrey, no one will ever lay a finger on you again."
The deep, steady cadence of his voice anchored me. The frantic tension in my muscles slowly drained away. The darkness pulled me back under, and I let it take me.
***
Jack POV:
The wind howled across the asylum's rooftop, whipping my hair into my eyes. I stood at the edge, staring at the flashing red tail lights of the helicopter disappearing into the dark clouds.
My assistant scrambled up the roof access stairs. He was clutching a satellite phone, his face completely pale.
"Sir," he stammered. "The FAA... they refused the lockdown request."
I grabbed him by the lapels of his suit, lifting him onto his toes. "Why?!" I screamed over the wind. "Are the millions I pour into their political campaigns every year just toilet paper?!"
He swallowed hard. "The helicopter is broadcasting a Level One exemption code. It's a restricted channel used only for national security or... or top-tier financial syndicates. They have absolute priority."
My hands went numb. I let go of his suit.
I was a tech billionaire. I was the king of Silicon Valley's new money. I bought politicians and judges. But right now, staring at that empty sky, I felt a massive, invisible wall slam down in front of me. This wasn't a street gang. This was real, ancient money.
I snatched the phone from his hands and dialed the private number of the NYPD Deputy Commissioner. "I need roadblocks on every bridge and tunnel. Now."
The Commissioner's voice was evasive. "Jack, listen. The airspace clearance came from way above my pay grade. The forces moving tonight... we can't touch this. It's out of our jurisdiction."
He hung up.
I stared at the dead screen. A primal roar ripped from my throat. I hurled the satellite phone against the heavy wire fencing of the roof. The plastic and glass shattered into a hundred pieces.
A cold gust of wind hit my face. I looked down. My hands were still coated in Audrey’s drying blood. The dark red flakes clung to my skin. The suffocating terror wrapped around my throat again. She was gone.
***
Audrey POV:
Inside the helicopter, the doctor pressed a sterile gauze pad against the corner of my mouth. The rough stitches the guard had used had torn the flesh. The white gauze instantly soaked through with bright red blood.
Elliot stared at the blood. A storm of pure, unadulterated violence brewed in his eyes.
He pulled a heavily encrypted black phone from his pocket. He typed a single, brief command and hit send.
***
Jack POV:
My assistant’s backup phone buzzed frantically. He answered it, and all the color drained from his face.
"Sir," he whispered, his voice trembling. "That was the CFO. Our two primary offshore accounts in the Caymans... they were just frozen. A massive influx of phantom capital triggered a hostile freeze."
I turned slowly. My eyes felt like they were burning out of my skull.
Whoever took Audrey wasn't just escaping. They were casually, effortlessly crushing my financial arteries from the sky.
I forced air into my lungs. "Activate the backup liquidity pools. Get the entire tech department online right now. Trace the attack."
***
Audrey POV:
The helicopter banked over the Hudson River. The glittering skyline of Manhattan spread out through the windows, but the cabin remained thick with tension.
The doctor pushed a heavy dose of painkillers into my IV line. He leaned close to Elliot, his voice barely a murmur. He delivered his medical assessment of my face.
Elliot’s hands curled into fists. His knuckles turned bone-white. His manicured nails bit so hard into his palms I thought he would draw blood. He looked down at my pale, ruined face, his eyes flashing with a terrifying, cold-blooded intent to kill.
***
Jack POV:
I sat in the driver's seat of my Aston Martin. The rain pounded on the roof.
I looked at the empty passenger seat. A sudden, vivid memory flashed in my mind—Audrey sitting there, her hair blowing in the wind, smiling at me with that gentle, submissive warmth I had taken for granted.
My chest caved in. I slammed my bleeding fist into the reinforced glass of the window.
"I don't care who it is. Even if I have to turn New York upside down, I will bury them."