A Stolen Future, A Secret Bride

Kelsey Randolph POV:

My finger tapped the red icon on the screen, severing the call with the Blackwood agency.

The click was final. It was the sound of a heavy iron gate slamming shut on fifteen years of my life.

I slid the phone deep into the pocket of my trench coat. My posture was perfectly straight. I didn't tremble. I was done trembling. I had spent countless nights staring at my phone, desperately waiting for a text or a call from the man lying in the room ahead of me, letting the silence slowly suffocate me.

I walked up to the sterile glass window of the ICU.

Through the narrow gap in the blinds, I looked at Bennett. He lay on the hospital bed, a web of tubes snaking out from his pale skin, the mechanical ventilator breathing for him.

The heart monitor beeped in a steady, monotonous rhythm. It was the only sound in the empty, fluorescent-lit corridor.

My eyes lingered on his sharp jawline, the arrogant curve of his lips that even a coma couldn't completely erase. I stood there for exactly three seconds.

Not a single tear blurred my vision. Fifteen years ago, I had stood in the pouring rain outside his fraternity house, crying until my eyes were swollen shut, begging him to look at me. My tear ducts had dried up a long time ago.

I took a step back.

The sharp heel of my shoe struck the floor tiles with a crisp, echoing *clack*.

I didn't hesitate. I turned my back on the glass, on the hospital room, on the man who had consumed my entire existence. I walked toward the elevator at the end of the hall.

I pressed the down button. The metallic doors slowly slid open, revealing an empty, mirrored cab.

I stepped inside and pressed the button for the underground parking garage.

The sudden weightlessness of the descent hit my stomach. I took a deep breath, pulling the cold, sanitized air into my lungs, and squared my shoulders.

Half an hour later, I pushed open the heavy brass doors of the Upper East Side penthouse.

The motion-sensor lights flickered to life in the grand foyer. They instantly illuminated the massive, custom-painted portrait of Bennett and me hanging on the wall. In the painting, I was smiling, wearing diamonds, looking like the perfect, obedient Randolph matriarch.

I walked past it. I didn't even give it a sideways glance.

My footsteps were silent on the imported Persian rugs as I walked straight to the master bedroom. I pushed open the heavy walnut doors.

I walked into the cavernous walk-in closet and slid open my side of the glass partitions.

A wall of haute couture gowns and limited-edition handbags stared back at me. Millions of dollars of fabric and leather. I bypassed all of it. I reached into the very back corner and pulled out a faded, black canvas duffel bag.

It was the only thing I had brought with me when I moved into this gilded cage fifteen years ago. It was the only thing I was taking out.

I opened a velvet-lined drawer and pulled out my passport, along with a few old, battered bank cards that weren't tied to the Randolph family accounts.

I tossed the documents into the canvas bag.

I walked over to the marble vanity. Sitting right in the center was a pair of brilliant-cut ruby earrings. Bennett had tossed them onto the counter last week, a careless afterthought to pacify me after he missed our anniversary dinner.

I didn't even pick them up. I just swept my hand across the marble, knocking the earrings directly into the metal trash can. They hit the bottom with a hollow clatter.

I turned and walked to the corner of the bedroom, stopping in front of the concealed wall safe.

My fingers spun the mechanical dial with practiced ease. I entered the combination: the date of his mother's death.

A heavy, metallic *click* echoed in the quiet room. The thick steel door popped open.

The safe was entirely empty, except for a worn, dark red velvet box sitting dead center.

I reached inside. The moment my fingertips brushed the velvet, my hand paused for a fraction of a second.

I pulled the box out. It was heavy in my palm.

I pressed my thumb against the brass latch. The box sprang open, exposing the blinding, flawless brilliance of the Randolph family heirloom diamond necklace.

It was the ultimate symbol of the Randolph matriarch. It was the chain they used to choke the life out of me, disguised as a crown.

I stared at the diamonds for a long moment. A cold, mocking smirk twisted my lips.

I snapped the box shut with a sharp *crack*. I gripped it tightly in my fist and turned toward the massive marble fireplace in the living room.

"Worthless shackles," I whispered to the empty room.

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