Eight Years Lost, Now Truly Free

Alena POV:

I pushed through the heavy doors of the Waldorf, the cold night air a sharp contrast to the suffocating heat of the ballroom. My heart hammered against my ribs, a wild, triumphant drumbeat. Freedom. It tasted like bitter champagne and righteous fury.

"Alena! Stop!" Blake's voice, distorted by rage and desperation, cut through the city noise.

I didn't stop.

He grabbed my arm, his fingers digging into my skin. "Where the hell do you think you're going? After that stunt, you think you can just walk away?" He spun me around, his eyes blazing. "Who is he? This 'someone' you found? Some low-life from a dive bar? You think anyone could ever truly value you after... after everything?"

My blood ran cold. "After everything? What, after everything you did to me?"

"You're nothing without me, Alena," he hissed, his face twisted in a sneer. "You're a small-town girl who got lucky. You think you can escape me? The firm? New York? You'll crawl back. They always do." He squeezed my arm tighter. "Come back to my apartment. We can talk this through. I can give you anything. A bonus, a new car, a better position. Just… come back." His voice dropped, a manipulative whisper. "You're just confused. You belong with me."

His hand moved from my arm to my face, his thumb brushing my cheek, a gesture that once would have soothed me but now filled me with revulsion. My stomach churned.

Without thinking, without any conscious decision, I brought my knee up, hard, into his groin.

He gasped, a guttural sound of pain, his grip loosening. He stumbled back, clutching himself, his face contorted in shock and disbelief. "You… you bitch!"

I stared at him, my chest heaving. The rage, cold and clear, was intoxicating. "That," I said, my voice trembling but firm, "is for every time you called me 'damaged goods.' For every time you used me. For every lie." I took a step back, my gaze unwavering. "And this? This is for all the years I wasted on you." I lifted my hand and slapped him, the sound echoing sharply in the quiet street. "We're done, Blake. You can't buy me. You can't control me. And you definitely can't touch me."

I turned and ran, not bothering to see his reaction. My heels clattered on the pavement, carrying me away from the toxic remnants of my past. I hailed a cab, jumped in, and gave the driver the address of a small, nondescript hotel downtown. Anywhere far from him.

Blake stood frozen on the sidewalk, his jaw dropped, his hand still clutched to his groin. He watched the yellow cab disappear into the labyrinth of New York City traffic. The shock on his face was replaced by a slow-burning fury. He, Blake Molina, had just been publicly humiliated, struck, and abandoned. By her. He wouldn't forget this.

The next morning, the firm's inter-office memo system buzzed with a new directive. It landed in my inbox, even though I hadn't stepped foot in the office since the gala. I opened it, a knot of dread forming in my stomach.

Subject: Reassignment of Alena Taylor

"Effective immediately, due to recent organizational restructuring and the need for enhanced support in our administrative divisions, Ms. Alena Taylor will be reassigned to the Records Management Department. Her new responsibilities will include the meticulous organization and cataloging of archived legal documents and, where necessary, the physical relocation of classified materials. This strategic move ensures optimal utilization of all firm resources and personnel."

Records Management. The dusty, forgotten basement archives. A dead-end job, a punishment disguised as a "strategic move." Blake's revenge. He thought he could break me, force me to quit in shame, or worse, crawl back to him begging.

My colleagues, the few who still dared to make eye contact, offered pitying glances and hushed condolences. "Alena, I'm so sorry. This is… unfair." "Jenkins is trying to fight it, but Blake is relentless."

I simply nodded, a tight smile on my face. I knew. I understood. Blake wasn't just trying to punish me; he was trying to erase me. Make me invisible. Make me irrelevant.

He was desperate. And that made him dangerous.

My last day. My last shift. I was assigned to the night shift in the archives, a final insult. The basement was cold, damp, and smelled of old paper and neglect. Fluorescent lights hummed overhead, casting long, eerie shadows. My task? To move boxes of old client files from one dilapidated shelf to another. Manual labor. Exactly what Blake had intended.

I worked methodically, my muscles aching, the dull pain in my abdomen a constant companion. But strangely, I felt a sense of peace. This was rock bottom. From here, the only way was up. I was almost free. Just a few more hours.

A sudden, sharp crash echoed from upstairs. I froze, my heart leaping into my throat. The sound of shouting, then a bloodcurdling scream. My lawyer's instincts, honed over years, kicked in. Something was wrong. Terribly wrong.

I grabbed my phone, my fingers fumbling. I had to call security. As I dialled, I heard heavy footsteps thudding down the stairs. Two figures, large and menacing, burst into the archive room. They were masked, their eyes darting wildly.

"Where's the safe?" one of them growled, his voice muffled. "Where are the hard drives?"

Another scream, closer this time, pierced the silence. It was one of the night guards.

"Stay calm," I said, trying to keep my voice even, raising my hands slightly. "There's no safe down here. All sensitive data is off-site."

The first man laughed, a harsh, sneering sound. He held up a crowbar. "Don't lie to me, lady. We know about the Molina files. Where are they?" He gestured with the crowbar towards a row of old, metal cabinets.

"They're just old records," I pleaded, my mind racing, trying to buy time. "Irrelevant."

He didn't listen. He swung the crowbar, smashing it into a cabinet. Metal shrieked. Another crash from upstairs. Panic ripped through me. I was alone. The other guards were clearly overwhelmed.

My phone, still clutched in my hand, was ringing. It wasn't the firm's security. It was Blake.

I almost hung up. But a desperate, primal instinct took over. No one else knew I was down here. He was the only one who could help. He knew the firm's emergency protocols. He knew the building better than anyone.

I answered, my voice a frantic whisper. "Blake! It's Alena! I'm in the archives, there are intruders! Two of them, armed! They're looking for files! Call security, call the police, send help! Please!"

A pause. Then, Blake's voice, cold and detached. "Alena? Intruders? What are you talking about? Are you trying to trick me into coming back to the firm?" He sounded annoyed, inconvenienced.

"No, Blake, listen to me! This is real! They have a crowbar, they're smashing things! I think they hurt a guard!" My voice rose, bordering on a sob. "Please, Blake! I'm scared!"

Another pause. Then, a low chuckle. "Alena, Alena, Alena. Always the drama queen. You know, Brittany and I are just about to leave for dinner. A very important dinner. I can't be bothered with your fantasies right now."

My breath caught in my throat. Brittany. Dinner. He was with Brittany. And he thought I was lying.

"Blake, please! This is not a game! They're coming for me!" The masked man with the crowbar had heard my voice and was now advancing towards me, his eyes gleaming.

"You know what, Alena?" Blake's voice was sharp, cutting. "You made your bed. Now lie in it. You wanted to leave? Fine. You're no longer my problem." And then, a click. He hung up.

My phone went dead. He had hung up. He had left me.

The masked man was standing over me now, his shadow swallowing me whole. He raised the crowbar. "Last chance, lady. The Molina files. Where are they?"

Terror, cold and absolute, gripped me. Blake had abandoned me. He had left me to die. My lungs burned for air.

"There's an emergency exit," I choked out, pointing vaguely towards the far wall, a desperate lie. "Through that door. It leads to the street."

He hesitated, a momentary distraction. That was all I needed.

With a surge of adrenaline, I darted under his arm, scrambling towards a small, reinforced storage room I knew about, a forgotten space used for old server backups. I slammed the heavy metal door shut, the ancient lock clanking into place.

The masked man roared, pounding on the door. Metal screeched as he hammered the crowbar against it. The door shuddered, threatening to give way. I curled into a ball, my head pressed against my knees, my breath coming in ragged gasps. Each thud against the door resonated through my very bones.

My body was screaming. The pain in my abdomen had escalated into a searing inferno. Blood, warm and sticky, seeped through my clothes. I had been losing something precious, something only I knew about, for hours. The stress, the terror, the cold, hard floor… it was all too much.

As the frantic pounding continued, a single, crystal-clear thought cut through the fear and pain: Blake didn't just abandon me. He abandoned us. He let me face this alone, just as he had let me face every other difficult moment. The past eight years flashed before my eyes, a montage of my sacrifices, my devotion, his cold indifference.

He wasn't just a manipulator. He was a monster. And I was finally, truly, irrevocably free of him. Because he was willing to let me die.

Keep Reading
Read the Full Novel on Moboreader
UUnlock All Chapters
Open the Official Website
Chapters
Customize

You'll also like

Logo
Your guide to the best short dramas online. Free episode previews, full cast info, and links to official platforms — all in one place.
©2026 PinesDramas All Rights Reserved