Anya POV:
The phone lay shattered on the pavement, a fitting end to the false reality it had once conveyed. I didn't pick it up. There was no going back.
My body moved on autopilot, carrying me through the unfamiliar streets outside Juilliard. The academic world, once a sanctuary, now felt like another stage for his theatrical cruelty.
I clutched the secret Juilliard diploma roll in my hand, my other hand instinctively going to my stomach. A protective gesture. My mind was reeling.
I needed to process. Every cruel detail.
The way Camilla had looked at me in class today, her eyes shining with an almost conspiratorial excitement. She knew. She had to have known.
My "closest friend." Another lie, another betrayal heaped onto the monumental pile.
I found a quiet park bench, the cold metal a stark contrast to the burning in my chest. I sank onto it, pulling my knees to my chest.
A memory flashed: Grayson, holding me close after the cartel rescue, his voice rough with emotion, "You are mine, Anya. Always. We are bound."
Bound by an ironclad, secret marriage, he' d said. A bond he apparently considered easily broken.
I remembered the quiet ceremony we' d shared years ago, just us, a sacred vow whispered under the moonlight. No official papers, just his word. And my absolute faith.
How naive I had been. How utterly foolish.
My head pounded. The pain in my side, from earlier, flared again. It was a dull throb, a constant reminder of the physical and emotional wounds I carried.
I closed my eyes, trying to block out the image of him kissing Camilla. It was burned behind my eyelids.
I thought of all the sacrifices. My life for him. My dreams put on hold.
My talent for classical piano, cultivated in secret, a hidden passion. He had encouraged it, but always in the shadows. "Too dangerous to be known, my love," he'd said.
My graduation. My moment of quiet triumph. Reduced to this.
I felt a cold rage building. Not the fiery, impulsive anger of my youth, but a deep, chilling fury that settled in my bones.
I wasn' t a pawn. I wasn' t a plaything.
He saw Camilla as a "pure" version of me, before I was "tainted." The words echoed in my head, a venomous whisper.
Tainted? By saving his life? By enduring what I did for him?
The injustice of it all was suffocating.
I suddenly felt a profound need to reach out to my family. The family I' d lost, the family I' d been searching for discreetly over the years through a heritage network.
It was a desperate, long-shot plan. But now, it was my only hope. My only way out.
I pulled out my spare burner phone, the one he didn't know about. My fingers trembled as I typed. A single, urgent message to the network contact.
"Need help. Now. Have information."
The reply was almost immediate. "Location?"
I sent my coordinates, then switched off the phone, burying it deep in my purse.
A chilling thought struck me. Had he known about my search? Had he allowed it, knowing he' d cut me off when the time came?
It didn' t matter now. What mattered was survival. And escape.
I had to get out, not just from him, but from the shadow of his betrayal.
I stood up, pushing away the lingering ache in my side, the phantom weight of his lies.
My past with him was a beautiful cage. Now, the bars were broken.
I would reclaim myself. My identity. My worth.
The cold night air felt invigorating, a brutal cleansing. I walked away from the park, my steps firm, my resolve solidifying with each stride.
I left the shattered phone, the broken promises, and the ghost of a secret marriage behind me.
My new life would begin tonight.