"That monster!" Sarah sobbed, her voice laced with fury. "He just left you there! Again!"
My friends, their faces pale with shock and rage, quickly surrounded me. Horacio, his jaw tight, carefully lifted my head. "We need to get her to the emergency room. Now!"
They moved with frantic urgency, carrying me carefully through the stunned crowd and out into the night. My body was a symphony of pain. Every jostle, every movement, sent fresh waves of agony through me. The cold night air was a cruel balm against my burning skin.
I woke up in another hospital bed. The familiar scent of antiseptic filled my nostrils. This time, I was truly alone. No frantic friends, no angry Sarah. Just the quiet hum of machines and the occasional soft footsteps of a nurse.
A nurse, a kind-faced woman with tired eyes, noticed I was awake. "Your friends left a while ago, dear," she said gently. "They protested, but you insisted they go home, didn't you?"
I nodded slightly, a small movement that still sent a jolt of pain through my neck. "They have their own lives," I rasped, my throat raw. "I don't want to drag them into this anymore."
She sighed, a look of profound pity on her face. "You're a strong one, Mrs. Maddox. Stronger than most."
"I have to be," I whispered, the words tasting like ash. "I always have to be."
I spent the next few weeks in that sterile room, recovering in solitude. My friends called, of course, their voices filled with concern and quiet rage against Gregory. But I kept them at a distance. I needed to heal, not just my body, but my fractured soul. I needed to do it on my own terms.
My discharge was, once again, a solitary affair. I hailed a cab, my body still stiff, my heart a hollow echo. I directed the driver to my penthouse apartment, the opulent cage that had once been my prison.
The apartment felt eerily silent. A mausoleum. I walked through the familiar rooms, each one holding a memory, a ghost of a life I had once believed in. On shaky legs, I began to clear out my personal effects. Everything that was mine, everything that bore the mark of Christie Maddox, not Mrs. Gregory Henson.
Each item I carefully packed away, each gift from Gregory I discarded without a second thought, felt like a deliberate act of exorcism. I packed my books, my architectural sketches, the few personal photographs I allowed myself to keep. I threw away the expensive jewelry, the designer clothes, anything that reminded me of the gilded cage. I was shedding my skin, piece by painful piece.
I was in my study, carefully rolling up an old architectural drawing, when the front door chimed. My heart leaped, then plunged. It could only be one person.
The door opened. Gregory and Kennedy stepped into the foyer.
Gregory didn't even look at me. His gaze swept over the apartment, a look of mild annoyance on his face. He was holding Kennedy's hand, his fingers intertwined with hers. She was wearing a new, brightly colored dress. His clothes were, as always, impeccably tailored, but his face still bore the faint bruising from his brawl, and the worry lines from Kennedy's fall.
"This place is too cluttered," Kennedy announced, her voice echoing in the vast space. She wrinkled her nose. "And it smells of... old money. Can we redecorate, Gregory? Something fresh. Modern."
"Whatever you wish, my love," Gregory murmured, his voice soft, indulgent. He turned to his assistant, who had followed them in. "Davies, arrange for a complete renovation. And find a suitable space for Kennedy's acting studio. Perhaps the east wing?"
My jaw tightened. The east wing. It was where I had envisioned my own architectural studio, a quiet space where I could finally pursue my passion. He had dismissed the idea with a wave of his hand, saying it was "unnecessary."
I remembered moving into this apartment, five years ago. He had given me a brief tour, then left me to unpack alone. No questions about my preferences, no offers of help. Just a cold, functional allocation of space.
The contrast was stark, horrifying. He wasn't just cold. He was only cold to me. He wasn't incapable of love. He was just incapable of loving me. The truth, once a whispers, now roared in my ears.
I tried to slip away, to escape their presence, to lick my wounds in private. But Kennedy's voice, sharp and high-pitched, cut through the air.
"Mrs. Maddox!" she called out, her tone laced with malicious sweetness. "Where do you think you're going? And what are you wearing?"
I froze. I was wearing a simple, pale blue sundress. It was comfortable, easy to wear over my still-healing injuries.
"It's just a dress, Kennedy," I said, my voice tight.
She giggled, a harsh, unpleasant sound. "Oh, is it? Because it's the exact same shade as Gregory's tie. Are you trying to match him, Mrs. Maddox? Still trying to cling to him?"
I glanced at Gregory. He was wearing a pale blue tie. A coincidence. A horrifying, embarrassing coincidence.
"It's not intentional," I tried to explain, but Kennedy cut me off.
"Oh, it's very intentional!" she shrieked, her face contorted in a sneer. "You're pathetic! Still trying to pretend you're Mrs. Henson! Well, let me tell you something, bitch. You're yesterday's news. I'm the future!" She stomped her foot, her voice rising to a childish wail. "Gregory! Make her take it off! I don't want her wearing my color! I don't want her to even look at you!"
Gregory sighed, a deep, weary sound. He looked at Kennedy, then at me. His eyes were still cold. "Christie," he said, his voice devoid of emotion. "Take it off."
My jaw dropped. "What?"
"You heard me," he replied, his voice hardening. "Take off the dress. Now."
"Are you serious, Gregory?" I whispered, my eyes wide with disbelief and horror. "You're going to humiliate me like this? In my own home?"
"It's not your home anymore," Kennedy sneered, a triumphant glint in her eyes. "It's our home."
Gregory simply stared at me, his face impassive. His silence was his answer.
"No," I said, a tremor running through me. "I won't."
Kennedy let out another wail. "She's defying you, Gregory! She's disrespecting me! Make her!"
Gregory's expression darkened. He nodded to his bodyguards. "Help her remove the dress."
"No! Don't touch me!" I screamed, backing away, my heart pounding in my chest. The pain in my body was nothing compared to the fresh wave of humiliation that threatened to drown me. I tried to fight them off, but my strength was no match for their brute force.
Rough hands seized me. My dress was torn, ripped from my body. I cried out, struggling, but it was futile. The fabric shredded, exposing me in my underwear, my raw, bruised body a testament to my suffering. I stood there, trembling, naked in front of Gregory, Kennedy, and his staff. My face burned with shame.
"Now you understand your place, Christie," Gregory said, his voice flat, his eyes cold. "You are nothing here. Nothing."
My eyes, hot with unshed tears, met his. There was no pity, no regret. Just cold, hard indifference. I wanted to scream, to rail against his cruelty, but the words caught in my throat. All I could do was stumble, broken and humiliated, back to my room, the echoes of Kennedy's triumphant laughter chasing me down the hall.





