LOGINDiana's POV
Camila squinted at me the moment she opened the door. "Where did you spend the night? You look like crap."
I tried to smile, but my lips barely moved. "I didn’t sleep."
Her grin widened like she had just confirmed a suspicion. "And what are you doing here at this hour?" she asked, still smiling.
I ignored the expression on her face. I didn’t have the energy to figure it out. "Do you have a spare uniform? I need to wash the one I wore yesterday… and this dress."
Her smile vanished. "Wait. You’re Mr Gordon’s wife. Why on earth do you need a worker’s uniform?" She folded her arms, narrowing her eyes. "Don’t tell me you’re joining us to work again today?"
"Camila, marriage is just a label. A tag to wear," I whispered. "It doesn’t mean anything."
She tilted her head, frown deepening. "Really? Then where did you sleep last night?"
"Why do you ask?" I muttered, dodging the question.
"You’ve got threads from a rice sack stuck in your hair," she said bluntly. "Did you sleep in the storage room?"
My eyes widened. I rushed forward, clapping a hand over her mouth. I glanced left and right to make sure no one was around, my heart thudding with panic. "Please," I begged, lowering my voice. "No one must know."
When I let go, she stared at me, realisation dawning. "So that’s what you meant by ‘marriage is just a tag.'" She exhaled heavily. "Mr Gordon is still being himself, huh? For a moment, I thought he had changed when he brought you here. But…" She shook her head, pity flashing in her eyes. "Girl, of all the men in this world, why him?"
I took the fresh uniform she pulled from her wardrobe, my voice small. "It has nothing to do with his wealth. Something beyond me happened, and that’s how I ended up here."
She eyed my belly. "Oh dear Lord, don’t tell me you’re creating a mini version of him inside you. One Gordon is already too much for the world."
Despite the ache in my chest, I forced a reply. "People aren’t born with character. The world shapes them. Exposure, circumstance… all that."
She sighed and softened. "Take a shower. And listen, if he ever forces you into the store room again, just come here. It’s not healthy for you or that little one to sleep on the floor."
For the first time that morning, I felt something close to gratitude. "Thank you, Camila."
After bathing, I washed the dress and the uniform from yesterday, wringing the clothes with trembling hands. I had just finished emptying the bucket when I turned and froze.
Mrs Smith stood at the edge of the yard, her eyes cold and calculating.
"Good morning, Mrs Smith," I greeted quickly, my stomach twisting.
She looked me up and down, then spoke with crisp authority. "You stay in Camila’s room until ten. That should be enough rest. Come to the main house at ten-thirty. I’ll assign your tasks."
Without another word, she turned and walked away, heels clicking on the stones.
I exhaled shakily. That wasn’t a concern. She wasn’t giving me rest for my sake; she was ensuring her husband never saw how she truly treated me.
At ten-thirty, I stood before her in the main house. As expected, Mr Smith was nowhere to be found. Mrs Smith’s tone was brisk and sharp as she rattled off a list of chores, polishing, scrubbing, cooking, each with strict time limits.
Halfway through her commands, Gordon strolled in, his cologne preceding him. He kissed his mother’s cheek and informed her casually, "I’m going into town." He didn’t even glance at me. Not a single word.
He brushed past me like I was invisible.
That became my life. Days blurred into weeks. I was a slave in everything but name, with Camila as my only comfort. She slipped me food when she could, loaned me clothes, and whispered encouragement when my strength faltered. But every night, Gordon sent me back to the store room, or worse. His cruelty was relentless.
And still, no one knew.
A month passed.
I was in the kitchen, sweat dripping down my temples as I worked over the stove. Supper had to be finished before six, before Mr Smith returned. Mrs Smith had banned anyone from helping me. Alone, I chopped and stirred, exhaustion weighing heavily on my bones.
Today should have been my graduation day. My classmates were probably tossing caps into the air, celebrating their future. I had no future. No ceremony. Just a knife in my hand and a pot simmering on the stove.
I hadn’t seen a doctor once since learning of my pregnancy. Gordon lied to his father, telling him he took me for check-ups. I said nothing. I couldn’t.
Suddenly, the kitchen spun. My vision swam, my legs threatening to give way. I sat quickly, clutching the counter until the dizziness eased. This wasn’t new, I had learned to endure it, to lie flat or rest until it passed.
But when I stood again, knife in hand, everything blurred. The room dimmed. My knees buckled.
The crash of falling utensils rang in my ears as darkness swallowed me.
I woke to the steady beep of machines. My left arm throbbed, wrapped in thick bandages. The pungent smell of antiseptic filled my nose.
Panic shot through me. The baby.
A doctor entered, clipboard in hand. She checked my vitals before meeting my desperate gaze.
"When was your last antenatal check?" she asked.
My lips trembled. "I… I never had one."
Her face softened with pity. "Hmm."
I gripped the sheet, my chest tightening. "Please. Is my baby okay?" Tears blurred my eyes.
The doctor hesitated, then sighed. "I’m sorry. Your pregnancy was very delicate, and your body was already weakened and malnourished. You lost the baby before we got you here. You also suffered burns to your hand from hot oil."
The words sliced through me like knives.
"No…" I shook my head violently, clutching my stomach. "No, please, not my baby."
But her lips stayed pressed in a sorrowful line.
A sound tore from my throat, half scream, half sob. I shoved my fist into my mouth to muffle it, rocking on the bed as hot tears poured down my face. My bandaged hand pressed against my empty belly, desperate for a heartbeat that was no longer there.
The door banged open. I barely registered the commotion until a heavy hand grabbed my arm.
"There she is," Mrs Smith’s sharp voice declared. "She cooked that meal. Officer, arrest her."
I blinked at her, stunned. What?
"She’s faking illness," Mrs Smith added coldly. "There’s nothing wrong with her."
The officer glanced uncertainly at the doctor.
"We’re still running tests," the doctor said, frowning. "I can’t give results yet."
That didn’t matter. The officer yanked me upright, cuffing my wrists together.
"Wait.......what are you......?” My words broke into sobs. I was still in a hospital gown, my body weak, my womb aching with loss.
He dragged me down the hall, ignoring my protests. The cold bite of metal cut into my skin. Nurses and patients stared, whispering, but no one intervened.
The ride in the police car was a blur. My tears had dried, leaving me hollow, numb.
At the station, the officer barked orders. "Put her in a cell. No visitors allowed. She’s under investigation for attempted murder."
Attempted… murder? My mind reeled. What are they talking about? Whose murder? What did I supposedly do?
No one explained.
The cell door clanged shut behind me. I sank onto the hard cot, shivering in my hospital gown, bandaged hand throbbing.
The doctor’s voice echoed in my mind: I’m sorry, you lost the baby. Mrs. Smith’s orders followed like a poison whisper: Officer, arrest her.
The grief was too much. My knees buckled, and I fell to the cold floor, pressing my forehead against it.
A cry ripped from my throat, raw, broken, unrestrained.
It was the sound of a mother mourning, of a girl condemned, of a soul breaking into pieces.
Third Person's POVLucas arrived at the Warren mansion with footsteps too calm for the storm he carried. The marble foyer gleamed beneath chandeliers, pristine and deceitfully peaceful. His mother emerged from the sitting room, pearls resting perfectly on her collarbone, the image of grace, the illusion of purity.“Lucas, I didn’t know you were coming around today,” she said with a warm smile.Lucas simply stared.His pulse hammered as the memory resurfaced, the whisper of a broken man strapped to a chair earlier that day:“It’s your mother… she ordered the abduction. Diana. Her blood is rare. They want the marrow from the babies. To save your brother.”A brother Lucas never knew existed.“Lucas!” Mrs Warren called again, snapping him back.He blinked once, composure sliding into place like armour. “Forgive me, I fazed out.”Before she could pry further, another voice cut in.“Ah, Lucas ...... you’re here,” Eric Jones announced, descending the stairs with his usual smug confidence. He
Diana's POVThe car rolled to a stop outside Gordon’s apartment, pristine glass, high walls, the illusion of sanctuary polished into every inch of the facade. But to me, it was a threat dressed in sophistication. My instincts screamed to turn around, walk away, run if I had to… but my legs grounded themselves like I’d taken root in cement.“This is forward momentum,” I reminded myself silently. “This is one more step into the truth.”Gordon came around the car, his polished shoes crunching against the gravel as though each step carried weight he couldn’t afford to drop. His hand found my shoulder. Warm. Too familiar.“Let’s go,” he said quietly.I kept my eyes on his hand for a beat before forcing myself to look at his face. The hope in his expression made something uneasy coil in my stomach. I nodded anyway.We walked towards the front door, the atmosphere tightening like an elevator dropping too fast.“Diana,” he murmured, as if preparing me, “my mum and Tracy are inside.”I froze m
Diana’s POVConsciousness returned like a cold slap.The familiar ceiling loomed above me, sterile and smooth, a reminder that I hadn’t escaped anything, not truly. Lucas’s safehouse still held me like a quiet cage. The sheets beneath me were soft, the lighting warm… but comfort had teeth here.I pushed up slowly, back hitting the headboard. My body felt off, like my blood wasn’t syncing right with the world around me. A leftover chemical pulse hummed through my veins, a silent reminder of hands grabbing me, a needle… and Lucas bursting in just in time.Or exactly on time?I refused to be a pawn. I’d been preyed on enough, by fate, by powerful men who thought they could control me, by this relentless nightmare disguised as protection.Not anymore.I swung my legs down and rose, feet hitting the floor with purpose. Every movement was measured and careful. I wasn’t going to let panic betray me.I cracked the door open and peered out. Empty.Good.Stepping into the corridor felt like ste
Third Person's POVLucas burst back into the shadowy room, breath ragged, fury blazing beneath the calm mask he wore like armour. The two men who had taken Diana lay sprawled across the floor, still fighting the effects of the sedative he shot them with, but not for long. Lucas didn’t spare them a second look.He dropped to his knees beside Diana.“Diana. Stay with me,” he murmured urgently, cradling her head with shaking hands.Her skin was cold. Too cold.He fumbled in his pocket, retrieving the tiny vial he had earlier gotten from the doctor for this moment. When her lips wouldn’t cooperate, he pressed his mouth to hers, transferring the bitter liquid directly. A gentle slap of his fingers across her cheeks.“Come on. Wake up… please.”Her lashes fluttered, a ghost of awareness… then darkness reclaimed her. Lucas swallowed the surge of panic threatening to choke him. He laid her carefully onto the bed, and with one last brush of his thumb against her cheek, stood.There were other
Diana’s POVThe first thing I noticed was the silence. Thick, unnerving, unbroken. I opened my eyes slowly, my head heavy and fuzzy, and blinked against the soft, golden light spilling from hidden lamps. The room was quiet, almost pristine, too perfect. A faint scent of lavender clung to the air, mixed with the subtle tang of antiseptic.I tried to sit up, wincing as a dull ache ran through my belly. My hands instinctively went to it, cradling the invisible weight of the twins, and I shivered. They were safe, for now, but everything else wasn’t. Not this room, not the people around me, not even Lucas.“Where… am I?” I murmured, my voice hoarse.No answer. Only the whisper of air through hidden vents, the soft hum of some unknown machinery. My pulse picked up, a rapid tattoo that reminded me how alive I was, and how vulnerable.I forced my body upright, scanning the room. It looked almost like a suite in a luxury hotel: muted grey walls, polished hardwood floors, a large bed with immac
Diana's POVI woke the next morning to a silence too hollow to feel like peace. For a heartbeat, I lay there, absorbing the echo of last night, my sobbing, Lucas’s voice cracking under strain, the doctor’s cold recommendation ringing beneath my skin.Then instinct drew my palm to my belly.My babies. My responsibility now.I couldn’t afford another breakdown, not when the world had teeth poised at my throat.I slipped out of bed, my legs steadier than I expected. A shower washed away the tears but not the betrayal lodged under my ribs like a blade. I pulled on a simple grey office dress; my stomach was still flat enough to hide the truth growing inside me. One last glance in the mirror confirmed what I needed: composure, armour, distance.Both sets of documents, Gordon’s and Lucas’s, went into my bag. Their lies and truths between them weighed heavier than any weapon.When I opened the bedroom door, Lucas stood there, blocking the threshold, holding a tray of breakfast like some painf







