Elena POV:
The chemical stench was agony, absolute. My senses felt like they were being scoured with acid. I was trapped for hours, my head pounding, until a groundskeeper finally heard my weak cries and let me out.
I stumbled, somehow managing to stay upright, and forced myself to run. I had to get to the archive. Had to destroy the last pieces of him.
The short drive to the main headquarters was a blur of throbbing pain and desperate gasps for air. My hands, the burned one raw and the other scraped from the fall, fumbled with the keycard. I burst into the building, heading straight for the sub-level Scent Archive. The "Scent Diary." That was all I could think of.
I practically fell into the sterile white room, turning on the high-temperature incinerator. The roaring flame was a cleansing fire. I stayed there, shivering despite the heat, until the agonizing assault on my senses receded to a dull, throbbing ache.
My body was a canvas of bruises and a blistering burn. My mind, a whirlwind of emotional exhaustion, threatened to consume me. But I couldn't stop. I had to destroy it. The last box.
It held my Scent Diary. Years of notebooks filled with formulas tied to our life. A life I barely recognized anymore. A life with Adrian. The real Adrian.
Formula 07: First Kiss (Notes of rain, old books, and his cologne). Our college days. Formula 22: Tuscan Sun (Cypress, lemon groves, and sea salt). Our first trip abroad. Formula 54: White Rose & Vows. Our wedding day, before the car crash, before the amnesia, before Bella. We were smiling in every photo pasted next to the formulas, our eyes full of a fierce, youthful love. My heart ached, a deep, hollow pang. Even after everything, even after the torture, a part of me still clung to the ghost of that man. The hope, however faint, that he would one day remember. That we would resurface.
But that hope was a lie. A dangerous, self-destructive lie. This was it. I was burning it all down. Literally.
I started feeding the notebooks into the flames, shredding pages. Each tear was a defiant act, a severing of ties. This was my ritual, my goodbye.
With trembling hands, I tossed the last notebook in. The flames danced, consuming the edges of our past. The images of our smiles curled and blackened, turning to ash. It hurt, a pain almost as sharp as the burn on my hand, but it was a necessary pain. A pain of release.
Suddenly, the archive door burst open. Adrian stood there, his eyes wide, his chest heaving. He must have been alerted by security.
His gaze fell on my disheveled state, my tear-streaked face. His expression shifted, a flicker of concern in his eyes. "What happened to you?" he demanded, his voice rough. He took a step towards me, his hand reaching out.
"Don't touch me," I whispered, pulling back. The memory of his disgust, his violent shove just hours earlier, was still fresh.
His hand paused mid-air. Then his eyes dropped to the incinerator. The flames licked at the last vestiges of a notebook. A photo of us, young and laughing on our honeymoon, curled into blackness.
His face drained of color. His eyes narrowed, a cold rage replacing the concern. "What is this?" he snarled, kicking the incinerator door shut. "What are you burning?" He reached in with a pair of metal tongs, pulling out a charred, smoking remnant. It was the cover of my first diary.
"You really are insane, aren't you?" he spat, his voice laced with venom. He didn't ask. He accused. "Trying to burn company property? Are you trying to destroy my intellectual assets?" His eyes fixed on my face. "Is this part of your deranged plan? To act crazy, so Leo looks bad? So I'll feel sorry for you?"
He grabbed my injured hand, the one with the raw, blistering burn, and squeezed. A fresh wave of agony shot through me. I cried out.
"Fake!" he shouted, shoving my arm away. "It's all fake! You're trying to frame Bella, aren't you? You always hated her! You always tried to hurt her son!"
"I never tried to hurt anyone," I gasped, tears streaming down my face. "I just wanted to leave."
His words slammed into me, worse than any physical blow. They were brutal, dismissive, utterly devoid of recognition. The hope, that dangerous spark, died a final, definitive death.
"You're pathetic," he continued, his voice dripping with superiority. "Always seeking attention, always angling for sympathy. Do you want me to praise your talent, Elena? Do you want me to tell you how brilliant you are?" He stalked towards me, his eyes dark, predatory. "Is that what this little display is about? A desperate plea for professional validation?"
Before I could answer, he lunged, pushing me roughly against a metal workbench. I cried out as the cold steel pressed against my back. I struggled, but he was too strong, too fast. He pinned my arms, his weight pressing down on me.
"Don't," I choked out, a wave of terror washing over me. "Please, don't."
He laughed, a cold, humorless sound. "Don't? You think I want you? You think this is about desire?" His eyes raked over my body, my stained dress, my burned hand, a look of profound disgust on his face. "Close your eyes, Elena. You're not worth looking at."
My eyes squeezed shut, hot tears running down my temples. I braced myself for the terror, the violation. But it didn't come.
Instead, he hoisted me roughly over his shoulder. My body screamed in protest, every bruise flaring with pain. "Where are you taking me?" I cried, my voice raw with fear.
"To a place where you can't cause trouble," he sneered. "A place where you'll learn to be quiet."
He carried me down to the sub-zero level, to the Cryo-Extraction Room-a large, glass-walled chamber used for flash-freezing rare botanicals. My blood ran cold. The temperature inside was kept at a constant -20°C.
"Adrian, please," I begged, my voice cracking. "Let me go. I'll sign anything. I'll leave, I promise. You'll never see me again."
His grip tightened, digging into my flesh. "Never see you again?" His voice was a low growl. "You think it's that easy? You think I'll just let the nose of my company walk away?" He threw me inside the glass chamber. The impact on the icy floor sent a jolt of fresh agony through my body. He slammed the heavy, airtight door and locked it from the outside.
"Adrian, stop!" I yelled, pounding on the thick glass. But my body was weak, my movements clumsy. The cold was already seeping into my bones.
He ignored my pleas. He stood outside, his face a mask of cold fury.
"You are my employee, Elena. My asset," he declared, his voice chillingly calm through the intercom. "And you will remain so. You will never leave."
He turned a dial. A low hum filled the room as the flash-freeze cycle initiated. A blast of frigid air washed over me. I couldn't breathe. My vision swam. Black spots danced before my eyes.
Just before I succumbed to the blackness, a distorted melody flashed in my mind. Not a memory, but a feeling. A lullaby. A song we had written for a future that never came.
My lips, blue and numb, moved on their own. I began to hum, a desperate, fading tune.
Adrian froze. His hand, still on the control panel, clenched. His expression, moments ago a mask of sadistic pleasure, suddenly went slack. His eyes, fixed on my fading form, widened slightly.
The lullaby. His mind echoed, a jarring, unfamiliar thought. The lullaby. It was tied to a dream he often had. A dream of a sun-drenched nursery, a woman with long, dark hair singing, and a man, a shadow, whispering "my rose" as he held her hand. The woman in the dream was singing that exact tune.
His hands flew to the controls, frantically pulling levers and twisting dials. The device whirred, then powered down. The frigid blast receded, leaving me in a faint, unbearable ache.
He stumbled to the door, fumbling with the lock. He shook my shoulder, his voice rough with a new, unsettling urgency. "Elena! Elena, wake up! What is that song? How do you know that song? Did... did we know each other before?"
The world remained dark.