Isabella POV
The heavy oak doors of the master suite slammed against the walls with a deafening crack. I flinched, clutching my right side as Damien stormed into the room. He looked like a demon dragged straight from hell, his dark eyes burning with a lethal, unhinged fury that demanded blood.
I hadn't touched the massive king-sized bed. Instead, I had dragged a spare duvet and two pillows onto the cold, dark hardwood floor near the floor-to-ceiling windows. It was a pathetic fortress, but it was mine.
He stopped, his chest heaving beneath his tailored waistcoat as he took in the sight of me huddled on the floor. The glittering skyline of New York behind him offered no warmth.
"Get in the bed, Isabella." The Don's command. Low, vibrating with absolute authority.
"No." The word tore from my throat, trembling from the stabbing pain in my gut, but my gaze remained locked on his. "Your mother locked the guest wing, but I will never share a bed with you again."
He kicked the pillow near my feet, sending it flying across the room. "You are my wife. You will sleep where I tell you to sleep."
"I am your hostage, Damien," I spat, the venom in my voice masking my physical agony. "Not your wife."
The word snapped the last thread of his control. In a blur of motion, he closed the distance and clamped his hand around my upper arm. He hauled me to my feet with terrifying ease. A sharp cry escaped my lips as the sudden, violent movement sent a blinding spike of pain through my abdomen.
He froze.
His gaze dropped to where his large fingers were wrapped around my arm. Against my pale, parchment-like skin, ugly red marks were already blooming. For a fraction of a second, something akin to disgust flashed in his obsidian eyes—a fleeting horror at his own loss of control. He released me abruptly, as if my skin had burned him.
He masked the hesitation instantly with a cruel sneer. "Then rot on the floor."
He turned on his heel and stalked into the en-suite bathroom. The heavy glass door slammed shut, followed seconds later by the roar of the shower.
I collapsed back onto my makeshift bed, curling into a tight ball. The pain in my gut was a relentless, gnawing beast, sharper than it had been at The Plaza. The cold seeping from the floorboards made my teeth chatter—a pathetic, clicking sound I couldn't suppress in the dead silence of the room.
The water stopped. Damien emerged, a towel slung low on his hips, water dripping from his dark hair. He stopped at the edge of the rug, his jaw clenching as he listened to my uncontrollable shivering. It wasn't pity in his eyes; it was the deep irritation of a king whose property was malfunctioning. He could not tolerate disorder in his domain.
Without a word, he crossed the room.
Before I could scramble away, his arms slid under my knees and behind my back.
"Don't touch me," I gasped, weakly pushing against his solid chest.
He ignored my resistance completely, carrying me like a broken doll and tossing me onto the center of the massive mattress. He threw the heavy Egyptian cotton duvet over my shivering frame, trapping me in the suffocating scent of his cedarwood cologne.
I immediately scrambled to the absolute edge of the mattress, turning my back to him. The bed dipped as he lay down on the opposite side, facing the other way. We were in the same bed, but an ocean of silent, cold space stretched between us. I squeezed my eyes shut, clutching my burning abdomen, dreading the morning light.
Isabella POV
Morning broke through the bulletproof glass, painting the master suite in a cold, unforgiving gray. I hadn't slept. The stabbing agony in my lower right abdomen had morphed into a relentless, burning beast that consumed my every breath.
Beside me, the mattress shifted. The heavy scent of Damien's cedarwood cologne washed over me, mixing with the suffocating memory of his violent grip last night. My stomach violently lurched.
I clamped a hand over my mouth, scrambling out of the massive bed. My knees buckled the moment my bare feet hit the hardwood, but pure adrenaline and nausea propelled me forward. I practically crawled into the en-suite bathroom, collapsing over the cold porcelain of the toilet just as my stomach emptied itself.
I gasped for air, my forehead resting against the freezing rim, trembling so violently my teeth clicked.
A shadow fell over me.
Damien stood in the doorway, already dressed in a crisp white shirt and tailored trousers, looking down at me like I was a stain on his pristine marble floor. There was no concern in his obsidian eyes—only a lethal, simmering irritation.
"Is my presence so repulsive to you?" he demanded, his voice a low, dangerous rumble that echoed off the tiles.
"Damien... please," I choked out, clutching my side, my vision blurring with tears of pure agony. "I'm sick. I need—"
A heavy Egyptian cotton towel hit the side of my head, dropping onto my shaking shoulders.
"Stop this pathetic performance," he snapped, his tone dripping with absolute disgust. "You think gagging on my floor will make me forget your little stunt with the ledgers? Or your brother's treason?"
I stared at the white tile, the last fragile thread of my humanity snapping. He didn't see a dying woman. He saw a malfunctioning piece of property throwing a tantrum.
He turned on his heel, walking back into the bedroom. I forced myself up, using the sink for leverage, and dragged my broken body out of the bathroom.
Damien was adjusting his silver cufflinks in front of the mirror. On the velvet bench at the foot of the bed lay a midnight-blue silk gown.
"The Children's Hospital charity gala is tonight," he stated, not bothering to look at me. "You will wear that dress. You will stand by my side, and you will smile. We are going to show New York that the Trevino family is perfectly united."
"I can't," I whispered, my voice raw. "Damien, I need a doctor. I can barely stand."
He finally turned, closing the distance between us with that terrifying, predatory grace. He stopped inches from my face, his towering frame blocking out the morning light.
"The Davenport Estate's maintenance is paid for by my personal trust," he said, his voice dropping to a silken, deadly whisper.
My breath hitched. The blood drained from my face.
"If you are not in the car by seven," he continued, his dark eyes locking onto mine with absolute ruthlessness, "I will cut it off. I will let the bank seize the land, and I will throw your grandfather into a state facility. And not even your little traitor brother can help you with this."
He reached out, his knuckles brushing my deathly pale cheek in a mockingly gentle caress. I flinched, but he merely smirked, stepping back.
"Seven o'clock, Isabella. Don't be late."
The heavy oak doors clicked shut behind him, leaving me alone in the sprawling, gilded cage.
I sank to the floor, clutching my burning abdomen. He had weaponized the only thing I had left to love. Aurthur Davenport was my only weakness, and Damien knew exactly how to twist the knife.
But as the blinding physical pain washed over me again, a cold, terrifying clarity settled in my chest. If I died here today, my grandfather would be left at the mercy of a monster. I couldn't just survive tonight; I had to burn his empire to the ground. But first, I needed to make sure my body didn't betray me before I could strike the match.
Isabella POV
It took every ounce of my remaining willpower to drag myself off the hardwood floor, slip past the estate's guards under the guise of a morning fitting, and hail a cab to an anonymous Upper East Side clinic.
The sterile smell of the examination room was a sharp contrast to the suffocating cedarwood of my gilded cage.
"Your white blood cell count is dangerously high," the specialist said, his expression grim as he reviewed my charts. "It is acute appendicitis. If you don't go into surgery immediately, it will rupture. You will die of peritonitis, Miss... Smith."
*Die.* The word hung in the air, yet my heart beat with a strange, icy calm. I couldn't collapse now. Tonight’s gala was my only stage to prove my worth and secure my grandfather's safety.
"I need a few hours," I said, my voice devoid of emotion. "Give me something to keep me standing."
The doctor stared at me as if I were insane. "You are playing Russian roulette with your life."
"Load the chamber, Doctor."
Reluctantly, he administered a heavy dose of painkillers via injection and handed me a small bottle of pills. The blinding agony dulled to a heavy, numb throb, granting me a dangerous, temporary illusion of health.
Sitting in the back of a yellow taxi heading downtown, my phone vibrated. A text from Giselle Bernard.
*Izzy, let's clear the air before the gala. Lunch at Le Coucou? Like sisters. - G*
I stared at the screen. It was a trap, obviously. But if I refused, she would run to Damien, painting me as a petty, hysterical wife, giving him another excuse to lock me away before tonight. I needed to face her on her own battlefield.
I typed a single word: *Okay.*
At exactly twelve-thirty, I walked into *Le Coucou*. The crystal chandeliers cast a cold, unforgiving light over the white tablecloths and the city's elite.
Giselle wasn't alone. Damien sat beside her, his dark, tailored suit a stark contrast to her vibrant silk dress. The trap was perfectly set.
I slid into the chair opposite them. Between us sat a massive, three-tiered seafood tower. The overwhelming stench of raw oysters, clams, and brine hit my already churning stomach, making the bile rise in my throat.
Damien’s obsidian eyes locked onto my pale face, his jaw tight with irritation. He didn't see a sick woman; he saw a defiant piece of property.
"Eat," he commanded, his voice a low, dangerous rumble. "Stop this pathetic performance."
Giselle leaned forward, a victorious smirk playing on her glossed lips. She elegantly speared a raw oyster with a tiny silver fork and held it out toward me like I was a stray dog. "Don't upset Damien, Izzy. We're family now."
Something inside me—the last fragile thread of the obedient, terrified girl I used to be—snapped.
The painkiller coursing through my veins gave me a lethal, detached clarity. I didn't flinch. I didn't cry. I calmly opened my leather clutch and pulled out the blue folder—the exact replica of the annulment papers Damien had burned to ashes in his office.
I slammed the folder directly onto the crushed ice of the seafood tower.
The melting ice water immediately began to soak into the thick paper, blurring the ink, but the bold, typed words at the top were unmistakable.
Damien froze. The arrogant irritation vanished from his face, replaced by a chilling, absolute shock.
I stood up, looking down at the Dark Don of New York.
"This is my final offer, Damien," I said, my voice ringing clear and deadly over the quiet hum of the restaurant. "Or perhaps your rival, Gabriel Escobar, would be more interested in the *other* documents I have. The ledgers are still singing."
Giselle gasped, dropping her silver fork. It clattered against the porcelain plate, but Damien didn't even blink. His eyes were wide, dark, and burning with a sudden, violent realization that he had entirely lost control.
I didn't wait for his wrath to explode. I turned on my heel, my spine perfectly straight, and walked out of the restaurant, leaving my husband and his mistress drowning in the wreckage of their own making.