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Elara POV:
The hours after felt like living in a dream. A strange mix of exhilarating freedom and heart-pounding terror. I had the signed papers, but the war wasn't over. It wouldn't be over until I was gone.
Back in the penthouse, the silence was deafening. This place had never felt like a home. It was a museum, curated by Dante to project an image of untouchable wealth and power. My art was the only thing in the entire apartment that had any life in it.
I sat on the edge of the cold leather sofa, the signed papers clutched in my hand, and I just breathed.
An email notification popped up on my phone. It was from Julian. The subject line read: *"The Alps."*
My fingers trembled as I opened it. It was an offer. A six-month artist residency at a secluded, prestigious retreat in the Swiss Alps. A place for artists to work in peace, surrounded by staggering beauty. It was a lifeline. A chance to disappear, to heal, to start over in a place Dante's long shadow couldn't reach.
The offer was time-sensitive. They needed a decision by the end of the day.
There was no decision to make. This was my escape hatch.
I typed out my acceptance before the fear could take hold, before I could second-guess myself. Then I booked a one-way ticket to Zurich for the next morning.
The rest of the day was a blur of calculated action. I packed one suitcase. Not with the designer clothes Dante had bought me, the empty costumes for a role I no longer wanted to play. I packed my worn jeans, my comfortable sweaters, my sketchbooks, and a small box of my favorite oil paints.
I moved through the massive walk-in closet, a cavern of couture and diamonds, and felt nothing. These things weren't mine. They were props. I took only the things that felt like me: a worn copy of a poetry book my mother had given me, a faded photograph of my parents, my lucky paintbrush.
As I was zipping the suitcase, a wave of exhaustion hit me so hard I had to sit down on the bed. It was a deep, bone-weary fatigue that had been clinging to me for weeks. I'd blamed it on stress, on the emotional toll of my failing marriage.
Then a wave of nausea rolled through me, sharp and sudden. I rushed to the bathroom, my stomach heaving. I gripped the cold marble of the vanity, staring at my pale reflection in the mirror.
My mind started racing, connecting the dots I had refused to see. The fatigue. The nausea. The strange metallic taste in my mouth some mornings.
I counted the days. My blood ran cold.
No. It couldn't be. It was impossible.
Dante and I... we hadn't shared a bed with any real intimacy in over a year. Our interactions were scheduled, perfunctory. A duty he performed with cold efficiency once a month, a grim reminder of his claim on me. An act of possession, not passion. An obligation to produce an heir he never seemed to truly want.
A single, horrifying memory surfaced. Six weeks ago. After a rare, tense family dinner. He had come to my room smelling of whiskey and someone else's perfume. He hadn't been gentle. It was rough, detached, and over in minutes. An assertion of his rights. A reminder that my body, like everything else in his life, belonged to him.
My hand flew to my stomach. My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic, trapped bird.
I ran out of the apartment, not even bothering to grab a coat. I went to the 24-hour pharmacy down the street, my hands shaking so badly I could barely swipe my credit card. The pharmacist gave me a strange look, her eyes wide as she took in my silk pajamas under a hastily thrown-on trench coat.
Back in the penthouse, in the cold, sterile guest bathroom I used as my own, I took the test.
The two minutes I had to wait felt like a lifetime. Every second stretched into an eternity of dread. I paced the cold tile floor, my arms wrapped around myself. Please, no. Please, no. Not now.
The timer on my phone went off, a shrill, piercing sound in the silence.
I forced myself to look.
Two pink lines. Stark and undeniable against the white plastic.
Pregnant.
The test slipped from my fingers and clattered to the floor. My knees gave out, and I sank down, my back sliding against the cold wall. I was pregnant with the child of a man I was leaving. A man who saw me as a possession.
The baby... a child. A tiny, innocent life created from the ashes of a loveless marriage.
My plan to escape, to be free, to be just *Elara*, was suddenly gone. It evaporated like a mirage.
This was no longer about saving myself.
This was about saving my child. Saving them from Dante. From the cold, ruthless world of the Bratva. From a father who would see them not as a person to be loved, but as an heir. A legacy. Another asset to be controlled.
The fear that had been a quiet hum in the back of my mind became a roaring inferno. I had to get out. Not just for me anymore. I had to disappear so completely that he would never, ever find us.