Chapter 6

Jillian Chapman POV:

Grayson had read his sister' s journal. I knew it. The evidence was in his eyes, in the way he avoided my gaze when we crossed paths in the hallway, in the subtle pallor of his skin. He was haunted. The truth, finally unveiled, was a corrosive acid, eating away at his carefully constructed delusions.

I never mentioned the journal. I never brought up the past. I simply existed, a quiet, almost spectral presence in his lavish home, moving with a purposeful, silent grace. My silence was a more potent weapon than any accusation.

Kiera Lara vanished. Not with a bang, but with a whimper. I overheard whispers from the maids, hushed phone calls in Grayson' s study. He hadn' t just dismissed her. He had systematically dismantled her life.

"She lost everything," I heard his assistant, a nervous young man, confide to a housekeeper. "Malone sent her entire family' s assets to a shell corporation in the Cayman Islands. And then the tapes… the ones Kiera made, implicating herself in the Miles scandal… they just 'appeared' on every major news outlet. She' s facing multiple lawsuits. Fraud, defamation, conspiracy. They say he even leaked something about her offshore accounts. The IRS is involved."

A ghost of a smile touched my lips. Grayson, ever the predator. He knew how to destroy. And he was doing it for me. A twisted, violent act of atonement. It was a satisfaction, a cold, hard justice.

I remembered the whispers in the Columbia halls, the veiled looks, the thinly disguised disdain. "Jillian Chapman, the professor who slept with her student." "Dr. Miles, the pervert who preyed on young women." Kiera had orchestrated it all, planted the seeds of doubt, woven the web of lies. She' d always hated me, envied my intellect, my connection to Grayson. She saw me as a threat, a usurper of her rightful place by his side.

I had tried to ignore her, to rise above the petty jealousy. I had defended Grayson, fiercely, against the accusations that he was a manipulative student. I had, foolishly, believed in him, believed in us. When the university called me in, questioned my ethics, my judgment, I had stood firm, refusing to betray him, refusing to deny our love, even as it cost me everything.

"You could just say he took advantage of you, Professor Chapman," the dean had urged, his voice oily with concern. "We could protect your career. And then we could deal with your father' s… unfortunate situation."

"No," I had said, my voice shaking but resolute. "I love Grayson. And my father is innocent. I will not lie."

And my reward? Betrayal. Institutionalization. The loss of my son. The deaths of my parents. Kiera had been the architect of it all, fueled by her obsessive love for Grayson and her venomous hatred for me.

The door to my room clicked shut. I stood there, leaning against it, cutting off Grayson' s lingering gaze. He had been watching me from the hallway, a haunted look in his eyes.

A small thump against my leg. Ida. She had dropped a colorful book and launched herself into my arms, her small body a warm, solid comfort.

I hugged her tightly, burying my face in her soft hair. "My sweet girl," I murmured, kissing her forehead. I reached into my pocket, pulling out a small, individually wrapped piece of candy. "For you."

Ida' s eyes lit up. She unwrapped it carefully, popped it into her mouth, then looked at the remaining candy in my palm. My gaze drifted to the corner of the room, near the large armchair where Adam often sat, reading. He was there now, hunched over a thick book, pretending not to notice us.

Ida, sensing my unspoken thought, held out her candy. "Adam, do you want one?" she asked, her voice sweet and innocent.

Adam flinched, his shoulders tensing. He didn' t look up. He was still wary, still distant.

"He doesn' t like candy, sweetie," I said gently, but Ida shook her head.

"He does! He told me! He only pretends not to. I brought this one just for him!" She held out the candy, a small offering of friendship.

Adam slowly raised his head. His eyes, so like Grayson' s, were wide and hesitant. He looked from Ida to me. "Is that… is that for me?" he asked, his voice barely a whisper.

My heart ached with a strange, complex emotion. Adam. My little boy. A piece of my heart I hadn' t known how to reclaim. He was caught in the crossfire of a war he knew nothing about. The ice around my heart, painstakingly built over six years, began to crack, a tiny, almost imperceptible fissure.

I smiled, a soft, encouraging smile, and nodded. "Yes, Adam. Ida specifically chose that one for you."

Chapter 7

Jillian Chapman POV:

The heavy thud jolted me awake. My eyes snapped open, instantly alert. The digital clock on the bedside table glowed 2:37 AM. The door to my room creaked open, admitting a sliver of hallway light.

Grayson.

He stumbled in, reeking of whiskey and despair. His tie was loosened, his expensive shirt rumpled. He looked like a man who had been wrestling with ghosts. He sank to the edge of my bed, his head low, his shoulders shaking.

"Jillian," he slurred, his voice thick with emotion. He reached out, his hand finding mine, clinging to it desperately. "Please. Forgive me. I… I was wrong. So wrong." He leaned his head against my shoulder, his breath warm against my neck. His body trembled. "I loved her, Jillian. My sister. I loved her so much."

His sister. That was where it all began. The tragedy that had twisted Grayson, warped his perception, and ultimately destroyed us all.

He spoke of growing up in the harshest parts of the city, where hope was as scarce as clean water. His sister, Clara, was his only light, his guiding star. She was brilliant, fiercely intelligent, determined to escape their squalid existence through education. He adored her, revered her.

Clara, striving for a scholarship, had crossed paths with my father, Dr. Hartley Miles. He saw her potential, her hunger for knowledge. He became her mentor, her champion.

"He' s the kindest man, Grayson," Clara had told him, her eyes shining. "He believes in me. He says I can achieve anything."

One rainy evening, my father, leaving his office late, had found Clara huddled in a darkened alley, bruised and terrified. She had just been assaulted. She begged him not to call the police, terrified of the repercussions, of her family' s shame, of the threats from her attacker. My father, seeing her terror, had made the grave mistake of driving her to a small, private clinic, hoping to protect her privacy.

A photographer, bribed by a rival, had captured the moment: my father, a distinguished professor, helping a young, distraught woman into his car in the dead of night. The picture, devoid of context, screamed scandal.

Clara, overwhelmed by shame and fearing for her family, had fled. She changed her name, disappeared. Then, alone, pregnant from the assault, she had taken her own life.

Grayson, blinded by grief and fueled by the twisted narrative presented to him, had found the planted "evidence." The altered photo. The fabricated rumors. He believed the worst. He believed my father, his sister' s kind mentor, was her abuser. He believed Kiera, who had meticulously fueled his darkest suspicions.

And now, he held his sister' s journal. The real story. The truth.

"It wasn' t my father, Grayson," I whispered, my voice flat, devoid of emotion. "It was a monster from her past. And Kiera knew. She always knew." I pushed him gently away, creating a small distance between us. I looked at him, a cold, calculating smile touching my lips. "And you, Grayson, were her instrument."

He stared at me, his eyes wide, tormented. He broke down then, truly broke down, sobbing uncontrollably. His large frame shook with the force of his grief and regret. He clung to me, his tears soaking my nightgown.

Then, slowly, his sobs subsided. He lifted his head, his tear-filled eyes searching mine. His hand moved to my jaw, his thumb brushing my lips. He leaned in, attempting to kiss me.

I recoiled, pushing him back, a visceral instinct of self-preservation. Even in his raw vulnerability, the memory of his past cruelty was a wall between us.

He looked surprised by my rejection, hurt. But his eyes. His eyes were clear. He wasn' t as drunk as he pretended to be. This was a calculated move. A test.

He sighed, pushing himself off the bed. "Jillian," he said, his voice quiet now, solemn. "Please, just… care for him. For Adam. He needs you." He turned and walked out, leaving me alone with the ghosts of our past.

Care for Adam. My mind flashed back.

It was a cold winter night. The fire crackled in the hearth, casting dancing shadows on the walls. Grayson, my Grayson, had just lifted me into his arms, carrying me over the threshold of our new apartment. "Our new beginning, Professor Chapman," he' d whispered, his lips tracing the curve of my neck. "No more hiding."

I was pregnant then, already showing. He was ecstatic. He would spend hours in baby stores, poring over tiny onesies, building a crib with his own hands. "He' s going to be a boy, Jillian," he' d declared, his eyes shining with a fierce, possessive joy. "My son. Our son." He would talk to my belly, his voice a low rumble, telling our unborn child stories of the world he would conquer for him.

"Are you sure you' re ready for this, Grayson?" I' d asked, stroking his hair. "A family? It' s a lot."

He' d pulled me close, his eyes blazing with conviction. "I' m ready for anything, as long as it' s with you. And our son. My future starts now."

He had been so happy, so full of hope. And then Kiera, his sister' s death, the carefully planted lies. It had turned him into a monster.

After I was institutionalized, after Adam was taken, I existed in a haze of despair. The drugs kept me docile, the isolation stripped me of my will. But sometimes, Kiera would visit. She' d taunt me, tell me how happy Grayson and Adam were, how I was forgotten. "You' re a mistake," she' d whisper, her eyes gleaming. "A broken woman, just like your father."

I tried to fight back, to escape, to reclaim my son. But they were always one step ahead. Grayson, in his cruelest moments, would remind me. "If you ever try to leave, Jillian, if you ever try to tell anyone the truth, I' ll have your parents' graves dug up. I' ll desecrate their memory. You' ll have nothing left."

The threat had paralyzed me. My parents, their memory, was all I had left. So I endured. Until the day I found out I was pregnant again. In that dehumanizing place, during Grayson' s drunken visits, a new life had begun to form within me.

The thought of another child, another life tied to this man, this monster, had filled me with a despair so profound it almost broke me. I wanted to terminate it, to be free of him, to sever all ties. But the small, fluttering life inside me, a tiny spark in the vast darkness of my existence, stirred something within me. A stubborn hope. A fierce desire to protect this innocent being from the nightmare I was living.

I had secretly obtained birth control pills, crushing them into my water, hoping to trick him, to prevent a repeat of a pregnancy born of cruelty. But it was too late. I was already carrying Ida.

This child, conceived in the depths of my despair, was a secret. My secret. My hope. A gift from a broken world. I clung to her, a tiny flicker of light in my suffocating darkness. I swore then that I would escape. For her. For both my children.

Ida. My beautiful, brave Ida. She was the reason I fought, the reason I survived.

Now, as Grayson stumbled out of my room, leaving behind the lingering scent of regret and whiskey, I knew one thing with absolute certainty. He was ready. Ready to be used. Ready to pay.

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