My Freedom, His Lifelong Regret

Hailey Key

The restaurant was exclusive in that quiet, understated way that screamed money without saying a word. Soft lighting. Hushed conversations. The gentle clink of silverware against porcelain. The kind of place where the waitstaff materialized and vanished like ghosts, and the bill was never discussed, only paid.

I saw them immediately.

Clayton was laughing—a rich, genuine sound that I hadn't heard directed at me in months. Anjelica leaned into him, her hand resting possessively on his arm, her body angled toward him like he was the only person in the room. They looked like a photograph from a society magazine: the perfect couple, comfortable in their shared world, radiant and untroubled.

Anjelica spotted me first. Her smile widened, a predatory gleam flickering in her eyes. She disentangled herself from Clayton with practiced grace and took a step toward me.

"Hailey, darling! You made it!" Her voice dripped with false sweetness, honey laced with arsenic. "Clayton and I were just discussing how terribly rude it would be if you didn't join us. I'm so glad you could make it to our... engagement celebration."

She gestured toward the empty chair beside Clayton. The chair I used to occupy.

My jaw tightened. Engagement. So this was it. The final cruelty, delivered with a smile and a champagne flute.

I walked toward the table, my legs feeling strangely heavy beneath me, each step a conscious effort. I stopped directly in front of Clayton. He looked up, and his smile faltered—just slightly—as he registered my expression.

"Clayton," I said. My voice was steady. It surprised me. "We're done. I'm breaking up with you."

His eyes widened, then narrowed. He reached for my hand. "Hailey, don't be ridiculous." His voice was low, carrying that familiar note of condescending charm. "You're just upset about the board meeting. I told you—it was a test. A small hurdle. Anjelica was helping me clear it." He tried to pull me closer.

I pulled my hand back, recoiling from his touch. The warmth of his skin felt like a betrayal. He thought this was another tantrum. Another stage in his endless series of tests. He genuinely believed I would fall back into line like I always had.

The thought sent a cold wave of clarity washing through me.

I remembered my father's funeral. I was barely eighteen, shattered, barely able to stand. Clayton stood beside me, a stoic presence in an expensive black suit. But when I cried, when I begged him to stay longer, he simply said, "My family expects me at dinner, Hailey. Your grief is understandable, but life continues." He left me alone with my mother, my world crumbling around me. He never offered comfort. He offered logic.

Later, when I struggled with university fees, he offered to pay. I refused, stubbornly clinging to my independence. Instead, I took three part-time jobs, working myself to exhaustion. He watched me struggle, but he never helped beyond offering loans—loans that always came with the implicit expectation of perpetual gratitude.

And then there was the darkest chapter. I was pregnant. A terrifying, unexpected surprise that left me reeling. I told him quietly, trembling with the hope of support, of a flicker of shared joy. He looked at me blankly.

"A baby? Now? Hailey, that's not part of the plan. My family... they expect a proper engagement. A suitable match. This is complicated."

He said he would handle it. He never did. He gave me money for appointments, but he never once came with me. I faced it alone—the fear, the impossible decisions, the ultimate loss. He never asked about it again. He simply moved on, as if it had never happened.

In his eyes, I was never a partner. I was a project. A challenge. A variable in his grand design. My feelings, my pain, my sacrifices—they were all irrelevant. Just pieces on a chessboard he controlled.

Anjelica suddenly pushed her chair back, her eyes flashing with possessive fire. She rose, her posture regal. "What exactly is going on here, Clayton?" she demanded, her icy gaze fixing on me.

Before I could respond, a voice behind me cut through the tension.

"Anjelica, darling. Still causing trouble?"

I froze.

That voice sent a shiver straight down my spine. A cold, familiar dread pooled in my stomach. Clayton looked confused, turning toward the newcomer. Anjelica's face, usually so composed, visibly paled.

Daron Hunter sauntered toward our table. He was impeccably dressed, a smirk playing at the corner of his lips, his eyes sweeping over me with a repulsive familiarity that made my skin crawl.

"Daron," Anjelica managed, her voice strained. "What are you doing here?"

He chuckled, low and unpleasant. "Just visiting my favorite cousin. And imagine my surprise, seeing Hailey here." He winked at me. "Long time no see, sweetheart."

I gripped the edge of the table, my knuckles whitening. My smile was a forced, brittle thing. "Daron," I acknowledged, barely above a whisper. The air around me suddenly felt thick. Suffocating.

Clayton, sensing the shift, tried to intervene. "Daron, Anjelica—is everything all right? What's going on?" He looked between us, bewildered.

Anjelica recovered quickly, her socialite mask slipping smoothly back into place. "Oh, nothing, Clayton. Just Daron being Daron. Such a tease." She turned to me, her voice dangerously sweet. "You know, Hailey, Daron always had a soft spot for you. Remember that little misunderstanding at the charity gala last year? He was just trying to show his affection. A bit clumsily, perhaps. But his intentions were pure, I assure you."

Daron's eyes lingered on me. His mouth twisted into a leer.

My stomach churned violently. The memory of that night crashed over me like a wave of filth. I gasped, a dry heave escaping my throat. My vision blurred at the edges.

It wasn't a misunderstanding. It was an assault.

He cornered me in a secluded hallway, his hands on my waist, his breath hot and wet against my neck. He whispered vulgar things, words that made my skin crawl and my stomach turn. When I fought back, he grabbed me, twisted my arm behind my back until I cried out. He left bruises that bloomed purple and yellow for weeks.

I told Clayton everything that night. I sobbed the words into his chest, my whole body shaking. He held me. His arms were tight around me. His words were gentle.

"I'll handle it, Hailey. Daron is family, but no one touches what's mine. He'll pay for this."

But he never did. He covered it up. He dismissed it as a drunken misunderstanding, the same language Anjelica was using now. He protected his family's image at the cost of my safety, my dignity, my truth. His promises were hollow shells, empty and weightless.

I was never his. I was just another problem to manage. Another inconvenience to sweep under the rug.

A wave of nausea rolled through me. The money my mother had given me—crisp hundred-dollar bills—felt heavy in my pocket. I pulled it out, a thick stack, and threw it at him. The bills scattered across the table, some fluttering onto Anjelica's pristine dress.

"Take your money, Clayton!" The words tore from my throat, raw and ragged. "Take your family. Your tests. Your legacy. You keep Anjelica, her cousin, and your twisted version of love. I'm done playing your game. I want nothing from you."

I turned to leave. I needed air. I needed to be anywhere but here, away from their smug faces and their casual cruelty.

A hand clamped down on my arm. Hard.

Clayton's bodyguard, Marcus—a hulking man with dead eyes—appeared as if from nowhere. He twisted my arm behind my back, forcing me to stop.

"Let go of me!" I screamed, struggling against his grip.

Marcus ignored me. His hold was unyielding. He pulled me back toward the table, toward the nightmare I was desperate to escape.

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