I walked out of Kenya' s room, not bothering to look back, the cold fury leaving my body drained, replaced by a profound emptiness. My feet moved mechanically, carrying me back to my own room. The nurses tried to stop me, but I brushed past them, a ghost stalking the hospital halls.
Once inside, I saw the stack of divorce papers I had discreetly requested earlier. I placed them squarely on the bedside table, right where he couldn't miss them. No note. No explanation. Just the stark reality of legal separation.
That night was a blur of silent tears and a hollow ache that settled deep in my bones. I didn't sleep. I just lay there, staring into the darkness, planning my escape.
The next morning, I checked myself out of the hospital despite the doctor's protests. I signed the forms, my hand steady, my resolve unwavering. I needed to move. To act. To sever every last tie.
I drove home, the familiar streets feeling alien beneath my tires. The house, once our sanctuary, now felt like a gilded cage. I walked through the silent rooms, collecting my few personal belongings. Photos, books, a worn sweater. Things that carried only my memories, not ours.
As I packed, I heard them. Kenya's shrill laughter, Leo's boisterous shouts, echoing from Elliott's study. The place where he used to sketch his dreams, where we'd plan our future. Now it was their playground. It mocked me.
Elliott appeared in the doorway, his face etched with a performative concern. "Jalynn, are you feeling better? I was so worried. I heard you checked out." He tried to sound loving, but his eyes darted nervously towards the study.
I looked at him, my gaze as cold as ice. "Sign them," I said, pointing to the papers on the table.
He followed my gaze, his eyes widening as he saw the divorce documents. "Jalynn, what is this? We talked about this. You were upset. You didn't mean it."
"I meant every word," I stated, my voice flat. "And I'm not asking. I'm telling you. Sign them. I want nothing from you. No money, no property. Just my freedom. And my child's freedom."
His face twisted in rage. He snatched the papers off the table and, with a guttural roar, ripped them in half. "No!" he screamed, his voice raw. "I won't let you do this! You're my wife! You're carrying my child! You're not going anywhere!"
He was a madman, his eyes wild. He grabbed my arm, his grip bruising. "You can't leave me, Jalynn! You belong here! With me!"
I tried to pull away, but he was too strong. Fear, cold and sharp, pierced through my numbness. He wouldn't let me go. He truly believed he owned me.
I tried calling an attorney, but every number I dialed went straight to voicemail, or I was politely told they couldn't help me. Elliott's reach was long, his influence absolute. He had shut me out. Trapped me.
He kept me a prisoner in my own home. My phone was confiscated. My car keys gone. Coretta tried to visit, but she was turned away by new security guards. I was isolated, alone, my world shrinking to the four walls of our house.
Meanwhile, Elliott paraded Kenya and Leo, his "new family," around town. News articles, splashed across social media, showed them smiling, hand-in-hand, at charity galas, at the park, at public events. He publicly declared Kenya and Leo the most important people in his life. The internet buzzed with their "touching" love story, a tale of overcoming obstacles, of a man stepping up for his dying ex and their child. My existence was erased.
Coretta suffered a relapse, her heart condition worsened by the public humiliation and Elliott's cruelty. I heard it from a maid, a whisper of concern that made my own stomach clench with guilt.
Every evening, Elliott would return, smelling faintly of Kenya's perfume. He'd bring me expensive gifts-jewelry, designer clothes-laying them on my bed as if they could atone for his absence. He'd try to talk, to touch me, to ask about "our" baby, about my day, as if everything was normal.
The scent of her on him made me gag. I would turn my head away, my heart a frozen block in my chest. I couldn't bear his touch, his voice, his hollow words.
One night, through the thin walls of the study, I heard him talking to his friend on the phone. His friend sounded concerned, questioning his choices.
"She'll come around," Elliott scoffed, his voice confident. "She always does. She loves me. She needs me. She just needs time to get used to the new arrangement."
"She thinks I can't live without him," I thought, a quiet, bitter realization. "He thinks I'm too weak to leave."
He was wrong. So wrong.
I had been planning for weeks, meticulously and secretly. Every day, while he was gone, I used a hidden burner phone, activated with Coretta's help, to arrange my escape. My most precious belongings, sentimental pieces, had been quietly shipped to a secure location. My passport, a new identity, a plane ticket. All arranged. All confirmed.
It was the night of Elliott's grand "Welcome Home" party for Kenya, a lavish affair covered by every local news outlet. He was celebrating their reunion, their future, with the whole city watching. I was supposed to be hidden away, the dirty little secret in his attic.
But I wasn't.
As the roar of his luxury car pulled away, I felt a calm I hadn't known in months. My heart didn't race. My hands didn't tremble. I was free.
I walked to the front door, the heavy iron gate standing ajar, left open for the stream of arriving guests. I stepped out, into the cool night air, leaving everything behind. I thought I heard a faint, desperate cry from the mansion as I walked away, a sound that might have been Elliott's voice, calling my name.
But I didn't stop. I kept walking, away from the lies, away from the pain, towards an unknown future. The world stretched out before me, vast and terrifying and utterly, gloriously free. A taxi waited at the end of the long driveway, a symbol of my new beginning. I slid into the back seat, the door closing softly, sealing my escape. The engine hummed, pulling me away, leaving the echoes of his betrayal behind.