The villa felt colder than ever like the walls themselves were holding their breath. I sank into the plush chair by the window, the city lights outside blurring through my tears. Everything from the night before swirled in my mind sharp, raw, impossible to silence.
I closed my eyes, and the memories clawed their way back up.
⸻
FLASHBACK
Ethan had seemed perfect at first.
He was gentle. Attentive. He showed up with flowers after Lily’s hospital visits, waited outside during my shifts, and whispered that he wanted to take care of me. For a girl whose world had always been falling apart, Ethan had felt like something whole.
I was too blind to see the cracks.
They came slowly. Subtle.
“Why did you talk to him for so long?” he’d say with a smile that didn’t reach his eyes.
“You don’t need to work so much. Let me handle it.”
At first, it felt like love. That obsessive kind of concern made me feel chosen. But it turned. Quick and cruel.
His love became control.
When I didn’t answer fast enough, he’d sulk, then yell. If I said I was too tired to meet, he’d show up anyway. The night he first laid a hand on me, it wasn’t a slap. It was a shove. Just hard enough to knock me back, just light enough for him to claim it wasn’t serious.
I believed him.
It happened again a week later, louder, rougher. He grabbed my arm hard enough to leave a bruise. And then came the guilt trips, the flowers, the apologies. Always the apologies.
“I’m sorry,” he said. “I just… I get scared when I think about losing you.”
I stayed.
But the worst night came months later. Lily had collapsed again. I rushed home late. Ethan was waiting. Drunk. Angry that I hadn’t picked up his calls.
I told him to stop. To get out.
He raised his hand.
This time, I didn’t flinch fast enough.
The side of my head hit the corner of the dresser. There was ringing, then black.
When I woke up, my blood had dried, and Ethan was gone.
That was the night I left for good.
⸻
I opened my eyes and felt the sting of that memory still fresh in my bones.
Damian knew. He’d known before we ever signed the contract. Naomi must’ve told him or maybe he figured it out himself. He had resources. He probably knew everything.
And yet he said nothing. Let me walk into this sham of a marriage. Let me play wife while he played saviour.
But he wasn’t saving me.
He was using me.
⸻
Naomi entered quietly, holding something in her hands.
A file. Slim. Plain.
“I shouldn’t be doing this,” she said, laying it on the coffee table. “But you deserve to know.”
I flipped it open. Photos. Notes. Headlines. All of them are about Helena Kingsley.
The names changed, but the theme was constant women ruined. Every woman who had ever tried to get close to Damian, publicly or privately, had suffered.
A model accused of theft. A young exec was forced out of her startup. A charity worker branded a gold-digger.
Each one was pushed out of his life by Helena, like contamination she had to sterilize.
And now I was next.
Naomi’s voice was low. “She won’t stop. She thinks you’re a threat. And she plays dirty.”
My fingers trembled as I turned the pages.
“She’s not just playing a game,” I murmured. “She’s rewriting lives.”
Naomi nodded. “She’s been doing it for years. No one ever stops her.”
⸻
Later that evening, Damian walked into the study.
I didn’t look at him at first.
He stood across the room like a judge behind glass.
“I never promised kindness,” he said flatly.
I turned. “You never promised anything. Just contracts and conditions.”
He tilted his head. “You’re upset because I didn’t warn you about Ethan. But I protected you.”
“By putting me in a marriage I didn’t understand?” I snapped. “You used my trauma to get what you wanted.”
He didn’t flinch. “You needed out. I gave you that.”
“You gave me silence,” I said, voice rising. “You knew what he did to me and still sat there, expressionless, like it was part of some calculated move.”
His jaw clenched. “I don’t coddle.”
“No,” I said. “You manipulate.”
He walked closer, eyes locked to mine. “Everything I did was to contain him. You don’t know what Ethan’s capable of when he’s cornered.”
“Oh, I know exactly what he’s capable of,” I said, fists clenched. “Because I’ve lived it.”
⸻
That night, I curled into the armchair again, knees drawn up. The city sparkled, oblivious.
I thought of Lily. Of all the nights I stayed up, calculating costs, praying for mercy. I thought of the hospital bills, the nights I let Ethan in because I couldn’t afford to fight both him and the world.
I thought of the bruises I covered, the fake smiles I gave, the silence I swallowed.
And now, I was married to a man who saw me as a strategy. Collateral.
Even Naomi, with her soft pity and regret, couldn’t unmake the truth.
But I wasn’t the same girl who let Ethan back in.
This time, I had lines.
And this time, I wasn’t afraid to draw them.
⸻
The next morning, the buzz of a new headline lit up my phone. Another rumour. Another whisper.
Another war began behind closed doors.
But I didn’t run.
I walked into the sunlit kitchen, where Damian stood reading reports.
I didn’t wait for him to speak.
“You don’t get to define my worth,” I said. “You bought time, not my soul.”
He looked up sharply.
But I was already walking away.
Not broken.
Not begging.
Not this time.
The buzz of my phone cut through the silence.
One new headline. My breath caught.
BREAKING: Mystery Wife’s Sister Admitted to Underfunded Facility — Does Kingsley Know?
My heart stopped.
There was a grainy photo of Lily—sitting in her wheelchair, pale and fragile, outside the clinic.
I clicked the article, hands trembling.
Helena’s fingerprints were all over it.
Ava Reynold's secrets exposed.
My stomach turned. She’d gone after Lily.
She hadn’t just attacked me.
She’d gone for the one person I couldn’t protect.
The one person I’d done all this for.
I stood slowly, chest heaving, hands clenched into fists.
I wasn’t crying anymore.
No.
I was done being hunted.
If Helena wanted war, then so would I.
The next morning, the headline still burned behind my eyes.BREAKING: Mystery Wife’s Sister Admitted to Underfunded Facility — Does Kingsley Know?There was Lily. Pale. Fragile. Alone in that photo. Her private battle turned into public ammunition.I didn’t cry.I couldn’t.Something in me had gone very still.I walked into the sunlit kitchen where Damian stood, back to me, reading over a stack of reports. Casual. Composed. As if the world hadn’t just weaponized my sister.“You don’t get to define my worth,” I said quietly.He turned, brow twitching faintly.“You bought my time,” I added, stronger now. “Not my soul.”His jaw tensed, but he didn’t speak.I didn’t wait for him to. I left before he could offer silence dressed as a strategy.This time, I didn’t walk away like a girl hoping he’d follow.I walked away like a woman drawing her line in the sand.⸻Downstairs, Naomi caught me in the hallway. Her eyes flicked left and right before she spoke.“She’s pushing another story. About
The villa felt colder than ever like the walls themselves were holding their breath. I sank into the plush chair by the window, the city lights outside blurring through my tears. Everything from the night before swirled in my mind sharp, raw, impossible to silence.I closed my eyes, and the memories clawed their way back up.⸻FLASHBACKEthan had seemed perfect at first.He was gentle. Attentive. He showed up with flowers after Lily’s hospital visits, waited outside during my shifts, and whispered that he wanted to take care of me. For a girl whose world had always been falling apart, Ethan had felt like something whole.I was too blind to see the cracks.They came slowly. Subtle.“Why did you talk to him for so long?” he’d say with a smile that didn’t reach his eyes.“You don’t need to work so much. Let me handle it.”At first, it felt like love. That obsessive kind of concern made me feel chosen. But it turned. Quick and cruel.His love became control.When I didn’t answer fast enou
The villa was quieter than ever. No chatter, no clinking glasses. Just silence.Damian stood by the big window, arms crossed, stiff like he thought he could control the world outside by staring at it.I should’ve known there’d be no peace after last night.His voice cut through the silence, cold and low. “You weren’t ready.”I blinked. “What?”“You should’ve expected this,” he said, turning to me. His look was sharp, no mercy. “You didn’t handle the press well. You went out alone and let them take your picture.”I wanted to speak, but nothing came out.He stepped closer, voice dropping. “That was careless.”I straightened up, voice sharp. “And you’re the expert? You think I wanted any of this?”He narrowed his eyes. “I’m saying you need to be ready. If you can’t take this life, maybe you shouldn’t be here.”My chest tightened. “This isn’t a game. It’s my life. My sister’s life.”Damian didn’t look away. “Your problems don’t matter. Not past the contract.”I stepped forward, matching h
The morning after the gala, everything blew up.I woke up to Naomi’s voice outside the guest room door. She sounded tense.“They used the photo,” she said. “Every outlet. It’s everywhere.”I didn’t need to ask which photo.Ethan.I stepped into the hallway. Naomi turned to me with a tablet. Headlines filled the screen.“Billionaire’s Bride or Pawn?”“Who Is Ava Reynolds and Why Was Her Ex at the Gala?”“Scandal Erupts in Kingsley Marriage.”One photo was everywhere, Ethan looking straight into the camera, and me in the background, caught off guard. I looked scared. Weak.Damian walked up behind Naomi. His sleeves were rolled, his face sharp.“We control it,” he said. “No interviews. No statements. Just silence.”“Control what?” I asked.He looked at me. “That we’re married. That this isn’t fake. That no one gets to come for you.”I wanted to believe him.But I didn’t.I turned away. It felt hard to breathe. “I need air.”—Lake Como sparkled under the sun like nothing had happened. I
My heels clicked too loud on the marble floor, echoing like guilt as I walked faster through the gilded hallway. The noise of the gala behind chatter, clinking glasses, and cameras flashing faded into a low hum. But Ethan’s words rang louder.Still pretending you’re not mine?I wasn’t his. Not anymore. Not ever again.I could feel Damian’s presence behind me calm, cold, unreadable. We hadn’t spoken since the encounter. Not a word. Not even a breath. But I could feel his stare burning into my back like a warning.We reached a quieter part of the villa, somewhere near the rear terrace. I stopped beside a stone column draped in ivy, the night air cooler against my skin.“What is he holding over you?” Damian’s voice cut through the silence like a blade. No warmth. No confusion. Just sharp precision, like he already suspected the worst and was giving me one last chance to lie.I turned to face him. “Nothing.”He stepped closer. “Try again.”I swallowed, trying to breathe evenly. “He’s just
The private jet touched down in Italy under a velvet dusk. Mountains rose like silent guards around the lake, the sky bleeding gold and ink. I watched from the window, my breath held tight in my chest.Damian hadn’t spoken a word since we boarded in New York.I didn’t expect warmth. But I didn’t expect this hollowness either like I didn’t exist unless cameras were around to prove it.The car met us at the edge of the runway. Black, sleek, silent. Damian slid in first, jaw set, coat crisp, phone in hand. I followed without a word. Mark sat up front, stone-faced.“We land to headlines,” Mark muttered. “Be ready.”“I’ve never stopped being ready,” I said softly.Damian glanced at me then. Brief. Measuring. Nothing in his face gave him away.—The villa was carved into the cliffs above Lake Como, old stone glowing gold in the setting sun. Naomi met us at the doors with a clipboard and a headset, barking details like a general.“Gown’s upstairs. Hair and makeup now. Step out looking like a