His final act of love? Drugging me and handing me over to a monster, sacrificing me as a "body double" to protect his precious Karis.
He thought I was just a broken foster kid with nowhere to go. He thought he could erase me.
He was wrong. As the private jet he put me on exploded over the ocean, I was already gone-saved by the powerful family I never knew I had. Now, I'm coming back, and they will pay for every single lie.
Chapter 1
Fae Ware POV:
The chill of the night air clung to me, a familiar companion from my days bouncing between foster homes. That was before Glenn Christensen. He found me, a lost girl, caught in the undertow of a life I didn't choose. He pulled me out, offered me a hand, then an entire world. I thought it was love. I thought it was forever. I was wrong.
He called me his wild rose. He said I was beautiful, untamed, something he needed to protect. I believed him. He didn't know about Juilliard. He didn't know about the music that lived inside me, the only thing truly mine. He wouldn' t have understood. He liked to own things. He liked to own me.
I remember the first time I truly felt like I belonged to him. It was a stupid street fight, some lowlife trying to mug him in a back alley. He was rich, but not street smart. I was both. I didn't think twice. My fists flew, my nails tore, my knees connected with flesh. I was a tornado of fury, protecting the man who had given me a home. He looked at me afterward, bruised and bleeding, but with a look in his eyes I' d never seen before. A mix of awe and possessiveness.
He bandaged my knuckles himself that night, his touch surprisingly gentle.
"Fae," he whispered, tracing the line of my jaw. "You're mine."
I leaned into his touch. "Always, Glenn."
He sealed it with a kiss, a promise etched in the warmth of his lips. He bought us a house the next day, a sprawling mansion overlooking the city. He filled it with everything I could ever want. Clothes, jewelry, endless possibilities. He told me it was all ours. Our future. Our life. I had never had anything of my own, not really. So, I clung to him, to the gilded cage he had built for me. I believed in us. I believed in him. I believed in forever.
It was a Tuesday. I was scrolling through Glenn' s tablet, looking for a movie. His texts popped up. Karis. My best friend. A photo. Her hand, perfectly manicured, resting on a velvet ring box. A diamond glittered, blinding me.
A cold wave washed over me. It started in my chest, a sudden, sharp ache, and spread through my veins. My fingers went numb. The screen blurred. This couldn't be real. Not Karis. Not with Glenn.
I had to see it. I had to know. My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a cage. I needed answers, even if they shattered my world. I dressed quickly, my movements stiff, robotic. I hailed a cab, giving the driver the address of Glenn' s downtown office. My gut twisted with each block we passed.
I saw them through the glass walls of his penthouse office. Glenn, on one knee, a dazzling ring held aloft. Karis, her face alight with a joy that sliced through me like a razor blade. She said yes. She threw her arms around him, her laughter echoing in the silent street below, a cruel serenade to my shattered heart.
The air left my lungs. My knees buckled. It felt like someone had scooped out my insides, leaving a hollow, aching void. The world tilted. Glenn. My Glenn. My forever. It was all a lie.
A memory flashed, stark and agonizing. The argument last year. A stupid misunderstanding, a fight about my late nights at the library – actually Juilliard. He'd been furious, convinced I was hiding something, pulling away.
"Please, Fae," he'd pleaded, his eyes wide with a despair that felt genuine. "Don't leave me. I can't lose you."
He' d bought me a delicate silver locket, engraved with our initials. "This," he' d said, fastening it around my neck, "is our promise. Our bond. My eternal loyalty."
His words, once a comfort, now felt like venom, poisoning every good memory. The depth of his betrayal hit me like a physical blow. He had promised me forever with a locket, while planning forever with another woman. I felt sick. Foolish. So incredibly naive.
I stumbled toward the office entrance, needing to escape, to breathe. But a muffled conversation stopped me. Glenn's voice. Karis's. They were just inside the reception area, their voices low, but sharp, cutting through the thin air.
"It's done," Karis purred, her tone sickeningly sweet. "Your grandfather will be pleased."
"He already is," Glenn responded, a coldness in his voice I'd never heard directed at me. "The legalities are simple. Fae's 'marriage' to me is easily dissolved. It was always a placeholder, a temporary arrangement to keep my family off my back while I sorted out the... logistics."
My breath hitched. Legalities? Placeholder?
"And Fae?" Karis asked, a wicked edge to her tone. "What about your 'wild rose'?"
Glenn chuckled, a sound that curdled my blood. "Fae will understand. She always does. I'll keep her close, of course. She' s too... useful to let go entirely. A little gaslighting, a few well-placed gifts, and she'll be back where she belongs. Under my thumb."
He laughed again. "She thinks she's so clever, so independent. But she's just a stray I picked up. She has no idea of her place."
My vision swam. It wasn't just a betrayal; it was a calculated, cruel game. He' d orchestrated everything. The "accidental" car crash that nearly ended my Juilliard scholarship application last year? The mysterious "lost files" that prevented my transfer to another program? He'd gaslighted me, made me doubt my own memories, my own sanity. He'd kept me small, kept me dependent.
"But Glenn, what if she actually tries to leave?" Karis pressed, her voice laced with feigned concern. "She can be... unpredictable."
"Don't worry, darling," Glenn said, his voice dripping with condescension. "I have everything under control. I'll make sure she stays exactly where I need her to be. She has no one else. She's just a foster kid. What's she going to do?"
He had said he loved me. He had said he needed me. He had said he would never hurt me. But his silence, when Karis alluded to my past trauma, was the loudest confession of all. He didn't care. He judged. He pitied. He saw me as broken, a project to be managed.
A guttural sob tore from my throat, raw and agonizing. It wasn' t just my heart that was breaking; it was my entire world, crumbling into dust.
"I need to make sure she doesn't ruin the engagement party," Glenn muttered, his voice barely audible. "She's so emotional. I'll tell her I'm going out of town for a business trip. That should buy us some time."
My phone buzzed in my pocket. A text from Glenn: Missing you, love. Business trip came up suddenly. Be back soon!
At the same time, another text flashed. From Karis: Finally! Glenn proposed! We're getting married! So excited to plan everything with you, bestie!
The irony was a bitter taste in my mouth. His sweet lies, her venomous triumph. It was all a twisted web, and I was the unsuspecting fly. I thought back to the "business trips" he used to take. The times he'd disappear for days, always with a plausible excuse. He'd been building this life with Karis, right under my nose. He' d been feeding me crumbs of affection while feasting with her.
My fingers tightened around my phone. No more. I wasn't just a foster kid. I was Fae Ware. And I was done playing his game. I would not allow myself to be controlled, manipulated, gaslighted. Not anymore. Not ever again.
I wiped the tears from my eyes, my jaw clenching. He wanted a fight? He was about to get one. But it wouldn't be the kind he expected. I wouldn't scream. I wouldn't cry. I would simply disappear.