Grace Keller POV:
I woke up to the smell of bleach and the soft, rhythmic beep of a monitor. Not the flatline of death, but the steady pulse of life. My head throbbed with a dull, persistent ache.
A single, perfect rose sat in a crystal vase on the bedside table. Next to it was a note on Julian' s heavy, cream-colored stationery.
Grace, I' ve arranged for the best care for your father. He is stable. Fabiola was terrified. Don' t cause any more trouble.
The words were a slap in the face. A bitter, hysterical laugh escaped my lips, turning into a sob that wracked my entire body. He' d saved my father, yes. A transaction. A price paid for my silence, for his precious Fabiola's peace of mind.
That was the moment the last spark of love for him died, leaving behind nothing but cold, hard ash.
I made a decision. Not a frantic, emotional one, but a calculated, icy resolve that settled deep in my bones. I was done. I was getting out.
The first call I made was not to my brother, but to a number I had saved for an emergency I never thought I' d face.
"Josephine," I whispered into the phone, my voice hoarse. Josephine Carter, Julian' s estranged mother. A shrewd, principled woman who had seen through her son's charismatic facade years ago. She had always been kind to me, seeing a strength in me that I never knew I possessed.
"Grace? What' s happened?" Her voice was sharp with concern.
"I need your help," I said, the words tumbling out. "I want to disappear. I want him to believe I' m dead. And I need to take my father and Bryan with me."
There was a pause on the other end of the line. Then, "Tell me everything."
A week later, I walked out of the hospital and took a taxi to the penthouse I once called home. In my bag were two sets of documents. One was a stack of legal papers Josephine' s formidable lawyers had drawn up. The other was a single, crisp divorce filing.
Julian was in his study when I arrived. He looked up, a flicker of something-annoyance? concern?-in his eyes as he took in my pale face and the fading bruise on my temple.
"You look terrible," he said, his voice holding a sliver of its old warmth. It was a cruel imitation of care.
I didn't say a word. I walked to his massive mahogany desk and placed the stack of papers in front of him. "I need you to sign these."
He glanced at the top page, a transfer of assets for a new shell corporation. His phone buzzed, a message from Fabiola, no doubt. His attention shifted instantly. "Fine, fine," he said, distracted, reaching for his pen. He scribbled his name on the signature line of the top page without a second thought.
He didn't bother to flip through the stack. He didn't see the document underneath, the one I had so carefully placed there. The divorce papers. With a pre-signed assets division that gave me nothing but my freedom. His arrogance was my weapon.
"I have to go," he said, already standing, his phone in his hand. "Fabiola needs me."
He walked out without a backward glance.
I watched him go, a cold, hollow feeling in my chest where my heart used to be. It wasn't pain. It was... nothing. A vast, empty tundra. This was the man who had pursued me for a year, who had bought the library I worked at just to have an excuse to see me, who had renounced his family' s arranged marriage to a European heiress, causing a scandal that rocked two continents, all to be with me, a quiet librarian.
And now, he couldn't even be bothered to read what he was signing because Fabiola needed him.
The irony was so bitter, it almost made me smile.
With his signature secured, I went to the city registrar's office. The final step was my own signature, witnessed and filed. It was done. I was legally free.
When I returned to the penthouse, Julian was there, laughing with Fabiola in the living room. She was draped over the sofa, a triumphant smirk on her face.
"Oh, good, you're back," Julian said, his tone casual. "Fabiola is going to be staying with us for a while. She doesn't feel safe in her own apartment."
"I don't mind," I said, my voice as empty as I felt.
Fabiola' s eyes glittered with malice. "Grace, darling, I'm feeling a bit peckish. Could you make me that seafood chowder Julian loves so much? The one you make."
It was a power play, a deliberate move to establish her dominance in my own home.
"No," I said quietly.
Fabiola' s face fell. She turned to Julian, her lower lip trembling. "Julian... she's being so mean to me. After everything I've been through."
Julian' s gaze hardened. He didn' t say a word, but he didn' t have to. The silent, immense pressure of his disapproval filled the room, suffocating me. It was the same look he gave his underlings just before he fired them.
I felt my spine turn to water. I had to play the part, just for a little while longer. My plan depended on it.
"Fine," I said, my voice tight. I turned and walked toward the kitchen.
I spent an hour preparing the soup, my hands moving on autopilot. When I brought the bowl out, Fabiola took one look at it and wrinkled her nose.
"It looks... bland," she said, pushing it away. "I've lost my appetite."
"It's the same recipe I've always used," I said through gritted teeth. "The one you used to beg me for."
A flicker of calculation crossed her face. "You know what," she said, her voice suddenly sweet, "I think I do want some after all. But my arm is so sore from where that man grabbed me. Could you feed me, Grace? Just a few bites?"
She was taunting me, pushing me. And Julian was letting her. He watched, his face a mask of indifference, waiting for me to submit.
And then, it happened. As I leaned forward, holding the spoon, Fabiola' s hand shot out. Not to take the spoon, but to grab the hot, heavy pot of chowder from the warmer on the side table.
With a sharp cry, she "accidentally" tipped it.
Scalding hot liquid and chunks of potato and clam spilled directly onto my right hand.
The pain was instantaneous, a searing, white-hot agony that stole my breath. I screamed, stumbling back, clutching my hand to my chest.
Julian was on his feet in an instant.
"Grace, what the hell is wrong with you?" Fabiola shrieked, cradling her own hand. "You burned me!"
"She burned you?" Julian roared, his eyes blazing with fury as he rushed to Fabiola's side, ignoring me completely.
"I... I..." I stammered, tears of pain and shock streaming down my face. I held up my hand, the skin already blistering, turning an angry, weeping red. "She did it on purpose! Look!"
For a moment, a flicker of doubt crossed Julian's face as his eyes darted from her pristine, untouched skin to my rapidly swelling hand. He saw it. He knew.
But Fabiola saw it too. "She's lying!" she cried, tears welling in her eyes. "She hates that I'm here! She's trying to drive me out, Julian! She wants me gone!"
The doubt in Julian's eyes was extinguished, replaced by a cold, hard rage. It was a fire that burned not for me, but for her.
"Apologize to Fabiola," he commanded, his voice low and dangerous.
"What?" I whispered, incredulous.
"Apologize. Now."
My heart, the one I thought was already dead and buried, broke all over again.
"And then," he continued, his voice dropping to a terrifying calm, "you can spend the night in the wine cellar to think about what you've done. You know how much you hate rats. Maybe they'll teach you some manners."
The wine cellar. Dark, damp, and my deepest, most primal fear. He knew. He was using my phobia against me, a weapon to punish me for a crime I didn't commit.
The fight went out of me. As his bodyguards moved to grab my arms, my gaze locked with Fabiola's over Julian's shoulder. She was smiling. A small, vicious, triumphant smile.