My husband, Brody, built his mayoral campaign on my stolen masterpiece, "Project Nightingale." I was his secret weapon, the ghostwriter of his success.
Then I discovered his affair. And then, I discovered I was pregnant. But to him, our baby wasn't a blessing; it was the perfect leverage to control me forever.
His mistress, frantic and fed a stream of his lies, confronted me in a rage. She pushed me. I lost my baby.
In the hospital, I saw the cold calculation in Brody's eyes. He wasn't mourning our child; he was worried about the scandal. He had taken my work, my love, and now my baby.
He thought he had broken me. But he had just unleashed the woman who had nothing left to lose.
I picked up the phone and called my lawyer. "It's time," I said, "to take back everything he stole."
Chapter 1
Finley Rhodes POV:
The applause was deafening, a roaring wave that crashed against me, even from the back of the crowded hall. My husband, Brody Murphy, stood on the stage, bathed in the glow of spotlights, a confident, practiced smile plastered across his face. He held up a thick binder, its cover gleaming under the lights. "Project Nightingale," he boomed, his voice echoing with perfectly modulated conviction, "will revitalize our city!" Every word, every gesture, was a performance I had helped choreograph, a narrative I had painfully crafted. And every single person in this room believed he was its sole author.
I watched him, my chest feeling tight, as if a fist had suddenly clamped around my lungs. My brilliant, groundbreaking urban renewal plan, the culmination of years of my life, was his property now. His platform. His ticket to the mayor' s office. I had poured my soul into those pages, sacrificed my own career, believing in us, in his vision.
Then I saw her. Gemma Dale, his campaign manager. She was standing just off to the side of the stage, her own smile matching Brody's, a secret, possessive flicker in her eyes as she looked at him. My stomach churned. It wasn't just the professional betrayal anymore. It never really had been.
After his speech, the crowd surged forward, eager to congratulate the man of the hour. Brody, ever the politician, worked the room, shaking hands, flashing that dazzling smile. He moved with a practiced ease, a predator in a perfectly tailored suit. I tried to catch his eye, to share in this moment, even if it was a stolen one. He glanced my way, a fleeting, dismissive nod, before his gaze snagged on Gemma.
She whispered something to him, her hand briefly touching his arm. It was a gesture both intimate and public, a casual claiming. Brody laughed, a rich, warm sound that never quite reached his eyes when he spoke to me. A shard of ice pierced my heart. It was a familiar pain, one I'd grown accustomed to.
I turned away, needing air, needing to escape the suffocating weight of their shared performance. I walked towards the back exit, past the lingering supporters, past the murmuring journalists. My phone buzzed in my hand. It was my mother. "Finley, where are you? Your father wants to know if Brody will be home for dinner."
I swallowed, the words tasting like ash. "I... I don't know, Mom. He's still caught up with the crowd."
My voice felt hollow, like I was speaking from a great distance. I could feel their eyes on me, the judging whispers, the pity. This wasn't the first time I'd been publicly sidelined, not the first time Brody had made sure everyone understood my place was firmly behind him.
I thought back to the Christmas party, just last year. Brody had been laughing with Gemma then too, their heads close, her hand resting on his lower back. I had seen it, felt the familiar prickle of humiliation. When I had confronted him later, he' d dismissed it as "campaign bonding." He told me I was being "overly sensitive," "paranoid." He called me "unprofessional," said I was "jeopardizing his image." His words were like little cuts, each one drawing blood, each one designed to make me doubt myself.
He enjoyed my pain. I knew it. I had seen the subtle smirk, the fleeting glint in his eyes when he pushed me to the edge. It was a game to him, a way to assert his control. And I, like a fool, kept playing along.
Tonight, something shifted inside me. The weight from years of gaslighting, of being told my feelings weren't real, of my contributions being erased, suddenly felt unbearable. The humiliation was a physical ache, a burning in my throat. I couldn' t pretend anymore. I couldn't breathe.
I pushed open the heavy oak doors and stepped out into the cool night air. I needed to get away, to just drive until I couldn' t see the city lights anymore. But as I reached my car, my phone rang again. It was Brody. His voice, usually so smooth and controlled, was laced with an edge of irritation.
"Finley? Where are you? What was that stunt about? Leaving in the middle of my speech?"
My hand trembled as I held the phone to my ear. "Stunt? Brody, I just needed some air."
"Some air? You walked out! Do you know how that looks? I had to send Gemma to smooth things over. She had to tell everyone you were feeling unwell." His voice dropped, becoming a low, dangerous growl. "You embarrass me."
My breath hitched. "You embarrass me."
He chuckled, a nasty, hollow sound that offered no humor. "Don't be ridiculous. Get back here. Now. We have an image to maintain. And you know what happens if you don't cooperate."
My mind flashed back to the arguments, the threats, the subtle ways he cut off my access to funds, to my friends, to my own sense of self. He had perfected the art of control. My body felt weak, suddenly, a dull ache beginning in my lower abdomen. I had to focus on breathing, on keeping the nausea at bay. I leaned against the car, suddenly dizzy.
"I can't right now, Brody. I'm not feeling well." The words were true, but they also felt like a surrender.
"Oh, now you're not feeling well," he sneered. "Convenient. Don't think for a second I'm falling for that, Finley. You're trying to make a scene, aren't you? Trying to get attention."
A fresh wave of pain, sharper this time, radiated through my belly. I gasped. "Brody, I'm serious. I need to go home."
"Go home? And what, hide in your bedroom like a pathetic child? No, you're coming back here. Or I'll make sure you regret it." He paused, his voice chillingly calm. "I'll make sure you have nothing left, Finley. You understand?"
My vision blurred. The pain was intensifying, twisting something deep inside me. I gripped the car door, trying to stand upright, but my legs felt like jelly. I could hear Brody's voice, distant now, still spewing threats, but the words were dissolving into a meaningless buzz.
"Finley? Are you listening to me?"
I couldn't answer. A cold sweat broke out on my forehead. The world tilted. I slid to the ground, the rough asphalt digging into my palms. My phone clattered to the pavement, Brody' s voice still droning from its speaker, unheeded.