Chapter 3

The silence that followed Victoria's slap was deafening. My cheek throbbed where her hand had connected, but the physical pain was nothing compared to the crushing weight of her words echoing in my mind: *You're nothing. You're unimportant.*

Michael stepped forward, his face twisted with an anger I'd never seen before. "This is exactly what I'm talking about," he said, his voice sharp enough to cut glass. "Six months ago, we were a peaceful family. Grace was safe, happy, planning her future with Joshua. Then you show up, and look what happens."

His green eyes—so like mine, yet filled with such hatred—bored into me. "None of this would have happened if you'd just stayed wherever you came from. We didn't need you. We never needed you."

The words hit me like physical blows, each one finding its mark in the tender places where I'd dared to hope for acceptance. I opened my mouth to defend myself, to explain that I'd never asked to be found, never asked to disrupt their perfect world, but no sound came out.

"Michael's right," Victoria said, her voice steadier now, more controlled, which somehow made it worse. "Twenty years of happiness, and you destroy it all in six months."

I turned desperately to my father, searching his face for any sign of support, any flicker of paternal protection. Richard York stood near the window, his hands clasped behind his back, staring out at the dawn breaking over the estate grounds. He might as well have been carved from stone for all the emotion he showed.

"Dad?" I whispered, my voice breaking on the word.

He didn't turn around. Didn't even acknowledge that I'd spoken. The silence stretched between us, and I realized with dawning horror that his lack of response was an answer in itself.

Then Joshua spoke, and his voice carried a venom that made my blood freeze.

"You brought this destruction into our lives," he said, stepping closer until I could see the disgust in his dark eyes. "Grace is lying in that warehouse because of you. She's terrified, hurt, probably thinking we've abandoned her, and it's all your fault."

I stared at him—this man I was supposed to marry, this man I'd been trying so hard to love—and saw nothing but contempt in his expression.

"Joshua, please," I began, but he cut me off with a sharp gesture.

"Don't." His voice was ice-cold. "Don't you dare try to explain this away. Grace is the kindest, most innocent person I know, and she's suffering because you couldn't stay in whatever hole you crawled out of."

The cruelty in his words left me breathless. This was the man who was supposed to protect me, stand by me, and instead he was tearing me apart with the rest of them.

Detective Morrison cleared her throat, breaking the toxic tension in the room. "We need to focus on the ransom demand. The kidnappers want ten million dollars within twenty-four hours."

Victoria straightened, her maternal instincts kicking in despite her fury. "Whatever they want, they'll get it. Grace is worth everything."

The implication hung heavy in the air—Grace was worth everything, while I was worth nothing.

"We'll coordinate with the FBI," Detective Morrison continued. "In the meantime, everyone in this house is considered a person of interest. No one leaves the property."

As the police and FBI agents took over the house, I found myself completely isolated. The family that had supposedly welcomed me home six months ago now treated me like a dangerous stranger. Meals were served in the formal dining room, but when I appeared, conversations stopped. Eyes followed me with suspicion and barely concealed hatred.

I ate alone in my room, the silence broken only by the sound of my own breathing and the distant murmur of family conferences I wasn't invited to join. Through my window, I could see FBI agents setting up equipment in the gardens, preparing for the ransom exchange.

On the second day, I tried to approach Victoria as she sat in the morning room, staring at a framed photo of Grace.

"Mother, I—"

"Don't call me that," she said without looking up. "You lost that right when you let them take my daughter."

"She's my sister," I said quietly. "I love her too."

Victoria's laugh was bitter and hollow. "Love? You've known her for six months. I raised her. I held her when she had nightmares, celebrated every birthday, every achievement. You're nothing to her. Nothing to any of us."

I backed away, her words following me like poison arrows.

Michael was no better. When I encountered him in the hallway, he actually stepped aside as if I might contaminate him. "Stay away from the rest of us," he said coldly. "You've done enough damage."

Joshua avoided me entirely, spending his time either with the FBI agents or locked in my father's study, presumably helping coordinate the rescue efforts. When our paths did cross, he looked through me as if I didn't exist.

The hours crawled by with agonizing slowness. I paced my room, stared out windows, and tried to process the complete collapse of everything I'd hoped for. Six months ago, I'd believed I was the luckiest person alive—an orphan who'd found her real family, a fairy tale come true.

Now I understood the truth. I wasn't their daughter. I was an intruder who'd disrupted their perfect world and brought tragedy down on the person they actually loved.

On the third day, Detective Morrison's radio crackled to life just as I was descending the main staircase.

"We've got her," the voice announced. "Grace York has been recovered. She's alive but injured. Paramedics are en route to the hospital."

The sound that escaped Victoria's throat was somewhere between a sob and a scream of relief. She collapsed into Richard's arms, her composure finally breaking completely. Michael let out a shaky breath, running his hands through his hair.

Joshua closed his eyes, his shoulders sagging with relief. "Thank God," he whispered.

I stood frozen on the staircase, watching my family's joy and relief, and feeling more alone than I ever had in any foster home. They rushed past me toward the door, eager to get to the hospital, to be with the daughter who truly mattered.

None of them looked back.

None of them invited me to come along.

As their cars disappeared down the driveway, I sank onto the marble steps and finally let the tears fall. Grace was safe—that was what mattered. But I was beginning to understand that in saving her, I had lost any chance of ever belonging to this family.

The house felt empty and cold around me, and I realized that this was my future—forever on the outside, forever unwanted, forever alone.

Chapter 4

The hospital corridors echoed with the sound of hurried footsteps as my family rushed toward Grace's room. I followed behind, my heart pounding with a mixture of relief that she was alive and dread at what I might find.

But as we approached the ICU, Joshua's hand shot out, blocking my path.

"Where do you think you're going?" His voice was cold, devoid of any warmth I'd once imagined I heard there.

"To see Grace," I said, confusion clouding my voice. "To make sure she's okay."

Victoria turned from where she stood outside Grace's room, her eyes red-rimmed from crying but blazing with fury. "Absolutely not. You are not going anywhere near her."

"But I need to apologize, to explain—"

"Explain what?" Michael stepped forward, his voice sharp. "How you led her into a trap? How your presence in our family caused this nightmare?"

Through the glass window, I could see Grace lying in the hospital bed, her face pale and drawn, bandages covering various wounds. A doctor was speaking quietly to Richard, gesturing toward charts and monitors.

"She's been asking for her family," Victoria said, her voice breaking slightly. "Her real family. The people who actually love her. Your presence would only upset her further."

The words hit me like physical blows. "I am her family. I'm her sister."

Joshua's laugh was bitter and cruel. "Sister? You've known her for six months. She's been traumatized because of you, and you think waltzing in there with your guilt will somehow help?"

I watched through the window as Grace suddenly sat up in bed, her eyes wide with terror, her mouth open in what looked like a scream. Nurses rushed to her side, trying to calm her as she thrashed against their gentle restraints.

"Panic attack," one of the nurses said as she emerged from the room. "She's been having them regularly since she arrived. Any sudden noise or unexpected presence triggers them."

Victoria's eyes found mine, and the hatred there was so intense it made me step backward. "This is what you've done to her. This is the damage you've caused."

"Mrs. York," the doctor approached, his expression grave. "I need to speak with you about Grace's condition. She's exhibiting severe PTSD symptoms, and we're concerned about her mental state. She's made several references to... self-harm."

The words hung in the air like a death sentence. Victoria's face crumpled, and she pressed her hand to her mouth to stifle a sob.

"We'll need to keep her under constant supervision," the doctor continued. "The trauma she's experienced has left her extremely fragile. Any additional stress could be dangerous."

Joshua's eyes never left my face as the doctor spoke, and I could see the blame crystallizing there, hardening into something that looked like hatred.

"You heard him," he said quietly. "Any additional stress could be dangerous. And what do you think seeing you would do to her?"

I opened my mouth to protest, but Victoria cut me off.

"Go home, Leilani. You're not wanted here. You're not needed here."

The drive back to the estate was conducted in complete silence. I sat in the back seat while Joshua drove, his knuckles white as he gripped the steering wheel. The tension in the car was suffocating, and I found myself holding my breath, afraid that even the sound of my breathing might set him off.

When we arrived at the house, Joshua didn't head toward the main entrance. Instead, he parked near the side door that led to his father's private study.

"We need to talk," he said, his voice flat and emotionless.

The study was a masculine room lined with dark wood and leather-bound books. Joshua closed the door behind us with a soft click that somehow sounded ominous in the silence.

He turned to face me, and I barely recognized the man I was supposed to marry. His dark eyes were cold, calculating, completely devoid of any affection or warmth.

"Do you understand what you've done?" he asked, his voice so calm it was terrifying.

"Joshua, I never meant for any of this to happen—"

"I don't care what you meant," he interrupted. "I care about results. And the result is that the woman I love is lying in a hospital bed, broken and traumatized, because of you."

The casual way he said 'the woman I love' hit me like a slap. Not 'Grace,' not 'your sister,' but 'the woman I love.' As if I were nothing more than an obstacle to his happiness.

"Grace has always been delicate," he continued, beginning to pace the room like a predator. "Sensitive. Pure. She's never experienced real pain or fear because we've always protected her. And now, because of your existence, she's been subjected to horrors that will haunt her for the rest of her life."

I sank into one of the leather chairs, my legs suddenly unable to support me. "I would have traded places with her in a heartbeat. They were supposed to take me."

"But they didn't, did they?" His voice was getting colder, more controlled. "Instead, an innocent woman suffered while you walked away without a scratch. Do you think that's fair?"

"Of course not, but—"

"I don't think you truly understand the gravity of what Grace has endured," he said, stopping his pacing to stare down at me. "The fear, the pain, the helplessness. I don't think you can comprehend what it means to suffer the way she has."

Something in his tone made my blood run cold. There was a calculating quality to his words, as if he were working through a problem in his mind.

"Joshua, what are you saying?"

He moved to his father's desk and pressed a button on the intercom. "Send them in," he said simply.

The door opened, and two large men entered the study. They weren't dressed like household staff or security guards. They looked like the kind of men you hired when you needed something unpleasant done quietly.

"What's going on?" I asked, rising from the chair, my heart beginning to race.

"You need to understand," Joshua said, his voice still terrifyingly calm. "You need to truly comprehend what Grace has gone through. And the only way to do that is to experience it yourself."

The two men moved toward me, and I backed against the wall, panic flooding my system.

"Joshua, please, you can't be serious—"

"Take her to the basement," he ordered, his voice cutting through my protests like a blade. "She needs to learn what real suffering feels like."

The men grabbed my arms, their grip strong and unyielding. I struggled against them, but they were too strong, too determined.

"Joshua!" I screamed as they dragged me toward the door. "Please, don't do this! I'm sorry! I'm so sorry!"

But he had already turned away, his attention focused on something else, as if I had ceased to exist.

As they pulled me from the study, I caught a glimpse of his face in the reflection of the window. There was no remorse there, no hesitation.

Only cold, cruel satisfaction.

I had just changed surname for less than a year. I just wore a similar dress to Grace that evening.

How come things had come to this situation? What made him hate me so much? Did I really do anything wrong?

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