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Escaping The Billionaire's Gilded Cage
img img Escaping The Billionaire's Gilded Cage img Chapter 2 No.2
2 Chapters
Chapter 8 No.8 img
Chapter 9 No.9 img
Chapter 10 No.10 img
Chapter 11 No.11 img
Chapter 12 No.12 img
Chapter 13 No.13 img
Chapter 14 No.14 img
Chapter 15 No.15 img
Chapter 16 No.16 img
Chapter 17 No.17 img
Chapter 18 No.18 img
Chapter 19 No.19 img
Chapter 20 No.20 img
Chapter 21 No.21 img
Chapter 22 No.22 img
Chapter 23 No.23 img
Chapter 24 No.24 img
Chapter 25 No.25 img
Chapter 26 No.26 img
Chapter 27 No.27 img
Chapter 28 No.28 img
Chapter 29 No.29 img
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Chapter 31 No.31 img
Chapter 32 No.32 img
Chapter 33 No.33 img
Chapter 34 No.34 img
Chapter 35 No.35 img
Chapter 36 No.36 img
Chapter 37 No.37 img
Chapter 38 No.38 img
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Chapter 47 No.47 img
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Chapter 2 No.2

Alina Phillips POV:

The email glowed on my screen, a single line of hope in the sterile white of the Swiss clinic. 'Congratulations, Ms. Phillips. We are pleased to offer you a place at the Juilliard School.'

For three years, this was the dream that kept me going, the light at the end of a very long, dark tunnel. My hands shook as I booked a one-way ticket to New York.

I didn't tell Jaxon. I wanted to see the look on his face when I walked through the door, whole and healed, ready to start our life.

I packed my small bag, a nervous energy buzzing under my skin. I was finally free.

Three years of therapy, of medication, of isolation. Jaxon had sent me here after the kidnapping, after my father's death, when the world had shattered into a million pieces.

He said it was the best place in the world for PTSD. He was my protector, my guardian, the man my father trusted with his life, and with me. He was everything.

At the front desk, I signed the discharge papers. The receptionist smiled warmly. "We're all so happy for you, Alina. It's a miracle."

I smiled back. "Thank you. It's been a long road."

"It certainly has," she said, tapping on her keyboard. "But to be fully recovered for a whole year and show no signs of relapse, it's wonderful. Here's your official certificate of recovery, dated a year ago. It's a formality, but I believe Mr. Francis wanted a copy for your records."

The air left my lungs.

I stared at her, the smile frozen on my face. "What did you say?"

"Your certificate?" She turned the monitor toward me. There it was, in black and white. My name. The date. A full twelve months ago. Stamped with the signature of the clinic's head doctor. 'Patient has made a full and complete recovery.'

"There must be a mistake," I whispered. My heart started to pound, a frantic, painful rhythm against my ribs. "The reports Mr. Francis sent me... they said I was still... unstable. That the medication was still necessary."

The receptionist frowned, her brow furrowed in confusion. "Mr. Francis? He hasn't requested a report in over a year. Not since we issued the recovery certificate. And the medication... Ms. Phillips, your prescription was for a low-dose vitamin supplement. It has been for the last year. It's all in the system."

My mind went blank. The room tilted. Vitamin supplements. Forged reports. An entire year. A year of my life, stolen. I thought about the letters Jaxon sent, filled with worry about my "slow progress." I remembered pushing back my Juilliard application, another year, because he said I wasn't ready. Because I trusted him.

I didn't believe it. I couldn't. It had to be a system error. A terrible, cruel mistake.

"I need to see him," I said, my voice tight. "I need to ask him."

I left the clinic in a daze, the certificate clutched in my hand like a death sentence. I went straight from the airport to The Onyx Club, his favorite haunt. A place where deals were made over whiskey and secrets were traded like currency. The hostess recognized me and let me pass. I heard his voice from a private room, the door slightly ajar. I stopped, my hand hovering over the handle.

"So, the merger is finally done. The Francis and Gomez empires are one. Congratulations, man." A friend's voice, loud and jovial.

Then, Jaxon's. Smooth as silk, laced with an amusement that made my blood run cold. "It was a long time coming. Three years of a very... structured arrangement."

"An arrangement that came with a beautiful wife," another voice teased. "Don't tell me you're not falling for Krystal Gomez. Everyone in New York can see how you dote on her."

My breath caught in my throat. Wife? Krystal Gomez? The socialite whose face was plastered on every magazine?

"Krystal is... necessary," Jaxon said, his voice dropping. "The marriage is a contract. It secures Nexus Corp for the next century. That's all."

"And what about Alina?" the first friend asked, his tone more serious. "She's supposed to be coming home soon, right? How are you going to explain your wife?"

A low chuckle. "I've been handling Alina. A few tweaked medical reports, the right 'medication' to keep her foggy. She thinks she's still too sick to come home. It bought me the time I needed."

The room erupted in laughter.

"You're a cold bastard, Jaxon. Keeping your fiancée locked away in Switzerland while you marry another woman."

"She's fragile," Jaxon said, a dismissive wave in his tone. I could picture it perfectly. "She was so obsessed with me after her dad died. Worshipped the ground I walked on. It was easy. A little more time, and then I'll end things with Krystal. Alina never has to know."

"You sure about that? Krystal seems to have you wrapped around her finger."

"Krystal is part of the deal," Jaxon stated, his voice hard. "Alina is my responsibility. I promised her father. I'll take care of her."

My body went rigid. I couldn't breathe. The air was thick, suffocating. Three years. He had lied to me for three years. He was married. The man I loved, the man who promised to wait for me, the man who held me when I woke up screaming from nightmares of my father's death, was married.

I bit my lip, hard, and tasted blood. The sharp, coppery tang was the only thing that felt real.

I remembered the day my father was buried. I was a wreck, eighteen years old and an orphan. Jaxon, his handsome face grim, had wrapped his arm around me. He was my father's young protégé, the brilliant tech prodigy my dad had mentored. He'd shielded me from the reporters, from the pitying looks. He whispered in my ear, "I'm here, Alina. I'll always protect you."

I fell in love with him then. A desperate, all-consuming love. I chased him relentlessly. I left anonymous gifts at his office. I learned his coffee order. I even went to a temple, kneeling for hours on the cold stone floor, praying for his safety when a rival company threatened him.

The day I confessed, he smiled, a real, warm smile that reached his eyes. He pulled me into his arms and said, "It's about time." We were happy. So happy.

Then his enemies came for me. They kidnapped me, tortured me. The trauma, layered on top of my father's death, broke something inside me. For months after, the sound of helicopters overhead sent me into fits of uncontrollable shaking-the rhythmic thump of the blades a trigger I couldn't escape. The doctors diagnosed me with severe PTSD. Jaxon held my hand, his eyes filled with a pain that mirrored my own.

"Marry me, Alina," he'd whispered, slipping a simple diamond band on my finger. "As soon as you're better, we'll get married. I'm sending you to the best clinic in Switzerland. I'll wait for you. I promise."

I clung to that promise like a lifeline. I worked so hard in therapy. I endured the treatments, the nightmares, the loneliness. I did it all for him, for our future.

And all along, he was planning a life with someone else.

My phone vibrated in my pocket. A message from Mrs. Francis, Jaxon's mother. I never had her number.

'Meet me at the St. Regis. King Cole Bar. Now.'

I walked there, a ghost in my own life. The city lights blurred around me. His mother was already there, a picture of cold, aristocratic elegance. She didn't waste time with pleasantries.

"Jaxon is married to Krystal Gomez," she said, her voice like ice. "It was a necessary merger to protect our family's legacy. You are an obstacle."

She slid a check across the table. The number on it had so many zeros I couldn't count them.

"This is for your troubles. Take it and disappear. Do not contact Jaxon again."

I stared at the check. It felt like a scene from a movie, a bad one. This had happened before, three years ago. She had tried to pay me to leave him then, too. I had thrown the check in her face, declaring my love was not for sale.

This time, I was too broken to fight. My love had been a joke all along.

I picked up the check. My voice was hollow, a stranger's voice. "Alright."

She looked surprised by my easy compliance.

"I'll leave," I said, meeting her cold gaze. "After my father's death anniversary. After that, Jaxon Francis will never find me again."

I would make sure of it.

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