Axel POV:
Alicia froze, her mouth agape. She had never heard that tone from me before. Never.
"You're yelling at me," she stammered, her voice thin. "For her? After everything she's done?" She dissolved into fresh tears. "She kidnapped me, Axel! She tried to ruin me!"
My head pounded. The endless cycle of accusations, the constant drama. It was exhausting. "Alicia, please. Just calm down." I pulled out my phone, my fingers flying across the screen. I needed to call Emerson. Now.
Her phone went straight to voicemail. Again. And again. A cold dread seeped into my veins. Where was she?
I reached for my cigarette case, a desperate need for nicotine. Empty. I threw it across the car, a surge of irritation. Then, I remembered Emerson, her small, thoughtful gestures. The little tin of artisanal mints she would leave on my desk, a gentle reminder when she noticed me reaching for a cigarette. She always said, "These are better for your lungs, darling."
Darling. The word echoed in my mind, a ghost of a memory. She wasn't here. She wouldn't be leaving mints on my desk anymore.
Alicia's voice, shrill and insistent, cut through my thoughts. "She's guilty, Axel! That's why she's not answering! She's scared! You have to report her! Have her arrested!" She leaned in, her voice dropping to a theatrical whisper. "If you don't, Axel, I swear... I'll go back. I'll leave. I can't stay here, not with her trying to destroy me."
My head throbbed. Threats. Always threats. From the victim. From the one I owed everything to.
"I'll handle it, Alicia," I said, my voice tight. "Just... go back to the penthouse. I'll deal with this."
She looked at me, confusion in her eyes. "Go back? Where?"
A strange unease settled over me. "To the penthouse, of course. Where else?"
She looked around the opulent interior of the car, then back at me. "Axel, darling. I live there. With you. I have for weeks."
My blood ran cold. The penthouse. Our penthouse. My home with Emerson. And Alicia had been living there. For weeks.
A wave of nausea washed over me. This wasn't right. It was never right.
We arrived at the penthouse. It was silent, sterile. Too quiet.
"Where's Emerson?" I demanded, my voice sharp, my eyes scanning the empty rooms.
The housekeeper, a kind, elderly woman who had been with Emerson since our wedding, wrung her hands. "Mr. Flynn, Mrs. Flynn... she hasn't been back since you had her... removed." Her voice trembled slightly. "She was so weak, sir. After being in that room..."
My heart lurched. That room. The isolation room. I had locked her in there. For three days. No food, no water. And I had forgotten. I had actually forgotten.
Alicia, ever the opportunist, stepped forward, her voice sweet. "She's just being dramatic, Axel. Trying to get your attention. She'll be back. She always comes back." She glanced at the housekeeper, a warning in her eyes. "She's probably just sulking somewhere."
Sulking. The word felt wrong. So utterly wrong.
I remembered Emerson's "moods," her "tantrums," her "little fits." The times I had dismissed her anger, her hurt, as childish petulance. I had always believed she would return, would apologize, would melt into my arms. Because she loved me.
My gaze fell on the plush, cream-colored sofa in the living room. Emerson's favorite. Alicia was sprawled across it, a satisfied smirk on her face. A sudden, irrational anger surged through me. She was in Emerson's spot. In Emerson's home.
I turned away, the anger churning in my gut. I retreated to my study, desperate for the solitude.
The next morning, I walked into the dining room, a flicker of hope in my chest. Maybe she was back. Maybe she had come to her senses.
And there she was. Sitting at the head of the table, sipping coffee, her hair tousled, wearing Emerson's silk robe.
Alicia.
My face contorted in a snarl. "What are you doing in that, Alicia?" My voice was low, dangerous.
She looked up, her eyes wide. "It was cold, Axel. And it's just a robe." She smiled, a faint, innocent curve of her lips. "I thought you told me to make myself at home."
"Take it off. Now." My voice was a soft growl. "Emerson has a delicate allergy to certain perfumes. She wouldn't want her clothes contaminated." It was a lie. Emerson was allergic to nothing. But the thought of Alicia's scent on Emerson's robe, on Emerson's skin, made my stomach turn.
Alicia pouted. "Axel, you're being so petty! It's just a robe. Besides, you told me I could have anything. You told me this was my home. That we would finally be together, like we always wanted." Her eyes welled up. "You said you'd marry me, Axel. Four years ago. Before you married her."
I froze. The words hung in the air, thick with unspoken history. The promise. The debt. The reason for everything.
This was Emerson's home too. The thought, sharp and clear, pierced through the fog of my obligation. My home with Emerson.
I pulled out my wallet, extracting a black card. "Go shopping, Alicia. Buy whatever you want. Get a new wardrobe. A new apartment. Anything."
She snatched the card, her eyes wide with greed, her tears immediately forgotten. She watched me leave, a triumphant glint in her eyes.
Days blurred into weeks. Every evening, I would walk into the penthouse, my eyes scanning the empty rooms, a gnawing anxiety in my gut. No Emerson. My fingers hovered over her contact in my phone, ninety-nine times, but I never pressed call. I didn't know what to say.
Then, Alicia called, her voice shrill and panicked. "Axel! Help me! She's here! She's going to kill me!"
My heart leaped into my throat. Emerson. My mind painted a terrifying picture: Emerson, wild with rage, finally snapping. I grabbed my keys, bursting out of the penthouse. I had to find her. I had to stop her. I had to see her.
I raced to the address Alicia had given me. A derelict warehouse district. I found her tied to a chair, her eyes wide with fear. And then, I saw him. The masked man, standing over her.
"Emerson!" I roared, my voice raw with desperation. "Where is she?!"
Alicia screamed, "Axel! She was here! She tried to kill me! She threatened me!"
I rushed to Alicia, cutting her free. The masked man, now subdued by my security, blurted out, "She paid me! The one who called you! She paid me to fake her kidnapping!"
I stared at him, then at Alicia, who was now weeping dramatically in my arms. A cold, chilling certainty settled over me. The lies. The manipulation. The constant drama. It was all her.
I looked at Alicia, really looked at her. Her face, devoid of genuine emotion, was a mask of calculated fear. The truth, stark and brutal, hit me with the force of a tidal wave.
"Take her away," I commanded, my voice flat, pointing at Alicia. "And bring me Emerson. Now."
I had to see her. I had to talk to her. I had to apologize. My heart ached with a longing I hadn't realized was there, a desperate need for her presence.
I arrived at her parents' house, adjusting my tie, trying to appear composed. It was the first time I had cared about my appearance in weeks. A wry, self-deprecating laugh escaped me. How pathetic. How utterly pathetic.
The housekeeper, seeing me, gasped, her eyes wide with shock. "Mr. Flynn? You're here?"
I remembered the countless evenings I'd left Emerson here, alone, in this grand, empty house, while I pursued my own ambitions. My gut twisted with guilt.
Emerson's parents, usually so solicitous, greeted me with cold, distant looks.
"Where's Emerson?" I asked, my voice tight. "I need to speak with her."
Her mother looked at her father, a silent communication passing between them. Then, her father, his face grim, said, "She's not here, Axel. And frankly, it's none of your business anymore." He paused, his voice filled with a quiet dignity. "You and Emerson are divorced."
My world tilted. "Divorced? What are you talking about? No! That's not possible! She's just... she's just angry. She always says that when she's angry."