From Broken Trophy To Unstoppable Queen

Kelsey POV

Bennett's final words had cut deeper than the shards of glass now littering the floor.

I didn't return to the apartment. I didn't check into a hotel.

I went to the only neutral ground left in New York.

Dr. Aris operated a private clinic in Queens-strictly off the books. It was where the families went when they had bullet holes they couldn't explain to the police, or bruises they didn't want to explain to their wives.

He patched the scrape on my elbow and administered a heavy sedative.

"You need to sleep, Kelsey," he said, his voice professional but pitying. "Your cortisol levels are dangerously high."

I slept for fourteen hours. When I woke, the room was dim, and Mr. Henderson was sitting in the chair beside my bed.

He looked as though he'd aged a decade overnight.

"He's moved fast, Kelsey," Henderson said, his voice grave. "Credit cards. Bank accounts. He even attempted to freeze your trust, though your father's stipulations prevented it."

"I expected that," I said, pushing myself upright. My body felt heavy, but my mind was surprisingly sharp-honed by the adrenaline of survival.

"He is spinning the narrative," Henderson continued. "He's telling everyone you attacked a pregnant woman in a jealous rage. The story is set. You are the unstable ex-wife."

"Let him talk," I said. "Is the paperwork done?"

"It is. You are legally severed from the Calloway estate. You are a free agent."

The door clicked open. A woman stepped inside, bringing with her a gust of cold air and an aura of effortless power.

She was tall, wearing a trench coat that likely cost more than the building we were standing in, and carrying the distinct, nostalgic scent of lavender and Gauloises.

"Aunt Josephine," I breathed.

She lived in Paris now. She had exiled herself from the family twenty years ago because she refused to be a pawn in their games.

She walked over and pulled me into an embrace. She felt like safety. She felt like the past and the future colliding.

"Pack your bags, ma chérie," she said. "New York is toxic. You are coming with me."

"I can't just run," I whispered.

"It is not running," she corrected, pulling back to look me in the eye. "It is a strategic withdrawal. But first, we must attend one last function. The Don demands it."

Randolph, Bennett's father, wanted a "clarification" dinner. A public display of unity to prove the families were stable despite the marital collapse.

I didn't want to go. But in this life, when the Don asks, you answer.

I wore black. Again.

The dinner was held at the Calloway estate. The long mahogany table was set with heavy silver and crystal that caught the chandelier light.

Bennett sat at the head. Alya was seated at his right hand. I was placed at the far end, exiled near the cousins.

Bennett ignored me completely. He spent the meal leaning into her space, whispering secrets against her skin, offering her choice morsels from his own plate.

It was a grotesque display of intimacy, performed solely for the audience.

The other wives looked at me with pity. I hated their pity far more than I hated Bennett's cruelty.

Alya caught my eye across the centerpiece. She smirked, resting a protective hand on her flat stomach.

"Bennett is so excited," she announced, her voice carrying over the clinking silverware. "We are already designing the nursery. He wants everything custom-made."

Bennett nodded, gazing at her with a polished, performative adoration. "Whatever you want, my love."

He was replacing me in real-time. He was erasing fifteen years of loyalty for a few weeks of novelty.

Josephine squeezed my hand under the table. "Look at him," she whispered. "He is performing. He is hollow."

"It still hurts," I admitted.

"Pain is good," she said. "It means you are waking up."

Suddenly, the floor lurched beneath us.

A boom echoed from the front gates, violent enough to rattle the crystal glasses on the table.

"Get down!" someone screamed.

Gunfire erupted outside. It was a raid. A rival faction, seizing the opportunity created by our internal chaos.

Pandemonium ensued. Bodyguards drew weapons. Guests screamed and scrambled beneath the heavy oak table.

I looked at Bennett.

This was instinct. This was the moment of truth.

He didn't look for me. He didn't look for his mother.

His body became a shield-but only for her.

He threw himself over Alya, dragging her toward the panic room entrance hidden behind the fireplace. He didn't even glance in my direction. If the bullets came through the window, I was collateral damage.

That was the final answer.

Josephine grabbed my arm, her grip like iron. "Now, Kelsey! While they are distracted!"

We didn't go to the panic room. We sprinted for the kitchen exit.

Smoke was already rising from the garden. Sirens wailed in the distance, a chaotic symphony.

I paused at the back gate. I looked back at the burning estate. I watched the flames dance in the reflection of the windows, consuming the only life I had ever known.

I wasn't afraid.

I felt a weight lift off my shoulders, heavy and suffocating.

"Are you coming?" Josephine asked, throwing open the door of her waiting car.

I turned my back on the fire.

"Yes," I said.

I slipped into the car, and we disappeared into the night.

No one saw me leave. No one cared.

And for the first time in my life, that was exactly what I wanted.

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