Chapter 1

I stared at the headline on my phone screen, reading it three times before the words made sense: "Missing Heiress Found After Seven Years." My fingers trembled as I scrolled through the article, each word a nail in the coffin of whatever fragile hope I'd been clinging to.

Eden Olson. Found in a private facility in Switzerland. Amnesia. Mental capacity of a five-year-old child.

I knew before Harrison even called.

"Jordan." His voice was different—alive in a way it hadn't been in years. "I'm coming home. Pack your things."

"Pack my—" I started, but he'd already hung up.

Two weeks. He left me alone for two weeks without explanation. Two weeks of unanswered calls, of staring at our wedding photo wondering if he'd even remember my face when he returned.

When he finally walked through our front door, he wasn't alone.

"Jordan," Harrison said, his hand protectively on the small blonde woman beside him. "This is Eden."

She looked up at me with wide blue eyes, her expression vacant yet somehow calculating.

"Hello," I said, extending my hand. She didn't take it.

"She doesn't understand complex social interactions," Harrison explained, leading her to our sofa. "The doctors say her mind is like a child's now."

I stood frozen, watching as he tucked a blanket around her shoulders—a blanket I'd knitted during our first winter together.

"Family meeting," Harrison announced later that evening, his voice leaving no room for discussion. "Eden will be staying with us indefinitely."

I sat across from them, watching as Eden leaned against Harrison's shoulder.

"You're to make accommodations," he continued, not meeting my eyes. "Eden needs stability."

That night, I watched from the doorway as movers carried my clothes from our bedroom—our bedroom—to a small guest room at the far end of the hallway.

"Careful with those," I said as one man roughly stuffed my silk blouses into a plastic bin. "They're delicate."

No one responded. They handled my things like trash.

Inside what had been our sanctuary, Eden sat cross-legged on our bed, running her fingers over the silk sheets I'd saved for months to buy.

"Soft," she said, looking up at Harrison with a smile that didn't reach her eyes. "Like clouds."

He smiled back at her—a real smile, the kind I hadn't seen in years.

---

I lay awake that night, staring at the unfamiliar ceiling of my new prison. The guest room was half the size of our master suite, with a narrow bed and a window that faced the street instead of our garden.

Voices drifted down the hallway.

"Harry," Eden's voice, childlike and sweet. "I can't sleep."

"What do you need, sweetheart?" His voice was tender in a way that made my chest ache.

"The ear thing. Like before."

Silence, then the sound of movement. I pressed my pillow against my ears, but it didn't block out Eden's contented sigh.

The next morning, Catherine Morgan, who had worked in our household for years, caught me in the kitchen.

"Mrs. Hamilton," she whispered, glancing nervously toward the hallway. "I... I thought you should know."

"Know what?"

"Miss Eden." Catherine's eyes darted around. "Last night, I saw her. She was stroking Mr. Hamilton's earlobe until he fell asleep. Just like... just like she used to."

My stomach twisted. "Thank you, Catherine."

Every night after that, I heard them. The soft requests, the intimate touches, the contented sighs. Each sound a reminder of my complete exclusion.

After a week of this torture, I found myself standing outside Harrison's study, my heart hammering against my ribs.

"May I come in?" I asked, knocking lightly.

Harrison looked up from his desk, his expression annoyed at the interruption. "What is it?"

I took a deep breath, steadying myself against the doorframe. "I want a divorce."

For a moment, something flickered across his face—surprise, perhaps, or amusement. Then he laughed, a cold sound that echoed in the cavernous room.

"A divorce." He repeated the words slowly, as if tasting them. "And where would you go, Jordan?"

"I don't know," I admitted. "But I can't stay here. Not like this."

Harrison opened a drawer and pulled out a thick folder. "Let me show you something."

He spread documents across the mahogany surface—medical bills, hospital invoices, pharmaceutical receipts. Each one marked with my name.

"Your heart surgery three years ago," he said, pointing to a particularly large number. "Three hundred thousand dollars."

He moved through them methodically, like a prosecutor presenting evidence.

"Monthly medications. Emergency room visits. Specialist consultations."

His finger stopped on the final page, where a total was written in red ink: $5,027,438.19.

"You owe me five million dollars, Jordan," he said, his voice devoid of emotion. "When you've repaid every cent, we can discuss divorce. Until then, you remain my wife."

I stared at the number, calculating wildly. My freelance copy editing brought in perhaps $30,000 a year. It would take... I couldn't even finish the math.

Harrison watched me, taking visible satisfaction in my realization.

"You're trapped," he said softly. "And we both know it."

As I turned to leave, my legs unsteady beneath me, I caught sight of our reflection in the study window—Harrison sitting tall and victorious behind his desk, and me, small and broken, walking away from everything I'd once believed was mine.

Chapter 2

The first time Eden hurt me, I thought it was an accident.

I was pouring coffee at breakfast, my hands steady despite the sleepless night I'd spent in the guest room. The morning light filtered through our kitchen windows, catching the steam rising from the pot.

"Jordan," Harrison said without looking up from his newspaper, "make sure Eden gets the milk first. It helps with her medication."

I nodded, reaching for the creamer. As I turned, Eden stretched across the table, her small hands grasping for the sugar bowl.

"I want sugar!" she exclaimed in that high-pitched voice she used whenever Harrison was nearby.

Her arm knocked against mine—or so it appeared. The coffee pot tilted, then toppled, sending a wave of scalding liquid across my hand and wrist.

I gasped, jerking back as the pain seared through my skin. The pot clattered to the floor, coffee splashing across the marble tiles.

"Oh! Oh no!" Eden's eyes widened, her lower lip trembling. "I'm so sorry! I didn't mean to!"

She burst into tears, her shoulders shaking as she curled into herself.

Harrison was beside her instantly, his arm around her shoulders. "It's okay, sweetheart. It was just an accident."

He didn't look at me once as he comforted her. My hand throbbed, angry red blisters already forming on my skin.

"I'll get a towel," I said quietly, backing away.

---

A week later, I was alone in the kitchen, chopping vegetables for dinner. The knife felt heavy in my hand, my injured skin still tender.

"Jordan?" Eden's voice startled me. She stood in the doorway, watching me with those too-knowing eyes.

"What do you need, Eden?" I asked, setting the knife down.

She approached slowly, her gaze fixed on the paring knife I'd been using.

"What does this do?" she asked, picking it up with curious fingers.

"Eden, be careful with that," I warned, reaching for it.

But she pulled away, examining the blade as if she'd never seen one before.

"It's shiny," she said, her voice a child's voice, but her eyes—her eyes were calculating.

Before I could react, she lunged forward. The knife sliced across my chin, a thin line of pain blooming into warm wetness.

I stumbled back, pressing my hand to my face. Blood seeped between my fingers, staining my white blouse crimson.

"I'm sorry! I'm sorry!" Eden wailed, dropping the knife with a clatter. "It was an accident!"

Harrison appeared in the doorway, his expression alarmed. "What happened?"

"She cut herself!" Eden sobbed, running to him. "I didn't mean to! The knife was too sharp!"

Harrison wrapped his arms around her, murmuring reassurances into her hair. "It's not your fault, sweetheart. You didn't know."

He never asked if I needed medical attention.

---

At dinner that night, I sat across from Eden, a bandage on my chin and another on my forehead where the knife had glanced off. The crystal chandelier cast harsh shadows across the table.

"Can I play with this?" Eden asked, holding up a heavy crystal paperweight from the sideboard.

"Eden, no—" Harrison began, but she'd already tossed it across the table.

It struck me directly above my left eye with surprising force. Pain exploded behind my vision as blood trickled down my face.

"It slipped!" she cried, her hands over her mouth in exaggerated horror. "My hands are so small and weak!"

Harrison rushed to her side as I pressed a napkin to my bleeding forehead.

"Call Dr. Morrison," he instructed Catherine, who stood frozen by the door. "Eden's upset. She needs something to calm her."

"Sir," Catherine hesitated, glancing at me, "perhaps Mrs. Hamilton needs medical attention first?"

"She's fine," Harrison snapped. "Just a small cut."

I excused myself to the bathroom, locking the door behind me. In the mirror, blood streaked down my face like a crimson tear. The wound would heal, but the scar would remain—a permanent reminder of my powerlessness.

---

The call came at 3:47 PM.

"Jordan," Dr. Patel's voice was grave over the phone. "Your grandfather has suffered a massive stroke. You should come right away."

I drove to the hospital with trembling hands, my mind racing. Grandfather was all I had left—my only family before Harrison.

In the ICU, he lay still, tubes and wires connecting him to machines that beeped too slowly.

"Grandpa," I whispered, taking his hand. "I'm here."

His eyes fluttered open briefly, recognizing me.

I pulled out my phone and dialed Harrison's number.

"Please," I begged when his voicemail picked up. "Grandpa's dying. I need to stay with him as long as necessary. Please call me back."

At 4:15 PM, I called again. "The doctors say he might not make it through the night. Harrison, please. He's my only family."

No response.

By 8 PM, I'd called seventeen times. The nurses gave me pitying looks as I paced the hallway, phone pressed to my ear.

"Thirty-seven times," a young nurse said softly as she checked my grandfather's vitals. "You've called him thirty-seven times."

At 11:52 PM, my grandfather squeezed my hand one final time.

"You deserved better than this life, little one," he whispered, his last words to me.

I sat beside his cooling body, my phone silent in my lap. Something broke inside me then—something fundamental that had nothing to do with my heart condition and everything to do with the woman I was becoming.

Outside the hospital window, the city lights blurred through my tears as I realized I was truly alone now.

Chapter 3

The morning after Grandpa died, my phone finally lit up with Harrison's name. I answered on the first ring, my throat raw from crying.

"Jordan," his voice was crisp, businesslike. "I'm returning your calls."

I pressed the phone harder against my ear, as if that might make his words more meaningful. "You didn't call yesterday. Or the day before."

"I was following up on a lead about Eden's missing years," he explained, no trace of apology in his tone. "It was important."

Important. More important than my grandfather's death. More important than me.

"Your grandfather was ninety-three, Jordan," Harrison continued, his voice distant. "You had to know this was coming."

I opened my mouth to respond—to scream, to cry, to beg him to understand—but found I had no words left. What was there to say to someone who couldn't see you even when you were standing right in front of them?

I ended the call.

---

Three days later, I stood alone at Grandpa's graveside. The cemetery was quiet except for the distant hum of traffic and the soft murmurs of perhaps twenty people from his retirement community who had come to pay their respects.

"Jordan?" A hesitant voice broke through my grief. Catherine Morgan, our household staff member, stood a few feet away, clutching a small bouquet of daisies. "I thought... I thought you might want company."

I nodded, unable to speak as tears threatened again. Catherine stepped forward, placing her flowers beside the generic arrangement Harrison had sent—carnations and baby's breath, the kind you'd find at any supermarket florist.

"He was a good man," she said softly. "I remember how he used to visit you at the house before..."

Before Harrison. Before Eden. Before I became a ghost in my own life.

"Thank you for coming," I whispered.

Catherine's presence was the only testament to my grief that day. Harrison didn't attend. He didn't even call to ask how it went.

---

Six weeks later, I sat in Dr. Sarah Chen's office, staring at the pregnancy test in my hand.

"I noticed some irregularities in your bloodwork," Dr. Chen explained gently. "Given your history and your heart condition, we need to be especially careful."

I nodded mechanically, my mind elsewhere. Pregnant. The word echoed in my head like a distant bell.

"Jordan?" Dr. Chen's voice seemed to come from far away. "Did you hear what I said?"

"Yes," I managed. "I'm pregnant."

But I felt nothing. No joy. No fear. Just a strange numbness that spread through my chest.

I never wanted to bring a child into this toxic marriage, but here it was, growing inside me anyway.

For three days, I kept the secret. I wandered through our house like a ghost, watching Harrison dote on Eden, listening to their laughter from behind closed doors.

On the fourth day, I woke to a searing pain in my abdomen. The bedsheets in my guest room were stained crimson, the blood spreading like spilled wine.

"No," I whispered, pressing my hands against my stomach. "No, please."

But my body had made its decision. The miscarriage was swift and brutal.

Catherine found me there, curled on the bathroom floor. Without hesitation, she called an ambulance and rode with me to the hospital, her hand gripping mine as silent tears streamed down my face.

---

From the sterile hospital bed, I finally called Harrison. He answered on the third ring, his voice impatient.

"What is it, Jordan? I'm in a meeting."

I swallowed hard, tasting salt and copper. "I was pregnant. I lost it. I'm at Presbyterian Hospital."

There was a long pause—so long I thought the call had dropped.

Finally, his voice came back, cold and final: "I only ever wanted children with Eden. This is probably for the best."

The line went dead.

I stared at the phone in my hand, then at the white ceiling tiles above me. Something had shifted inside me—something beyond grief or pain or loss. It was the death of hope itself.

Dr. Chen entered quietly, her eyes taking in my empty expression.

"Your husband?" she asked, though she already knew the answer.

I shook my head slightly.

She nodded, understanding without words. As she checked my vitals and IV, I saw her make a note in my chart: "Patient experiencing severe emotional distress in addition to physical trauma. Husband absent and apparently unsupportive."

I closed my eyes, too exhausted to care what she wrote. In that moment, I realized I was mourning not just my lost child, but the final death of any illusion that Harrison might someday see me as human.

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