From Ashes, A New Love Reborn
img img From Ashes, A New Love Reborn img Chapter 2
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Chapter 10 img
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Chapter 2

April POV:

Hamilton didn't move towards me. He just stood there, by the door, watching me. He slowly began to unbutton his cuffs, his movements precise and deliberate. It was the same way he prepared for a courtroom battle, a methodical ritual before he went in for the kill.

My heart hammered against my ribs like a trapped bird. I remembered a time when that same action, the slow rolling of his sleeves, meant he was about to pull me into his arms and cook dinner with me, his body warm against my back. Now, it only signaled danger.

Every good memory was tainted, poisoned by the man he had become. Or perhaps, the man he had always been, and I had just been too blind with love to see it. It was all because of Brittany. His precious, fragile Brittany.

I swallowed hard, the dryness in my throat making it feel like I was swallowing sand. My body was screaming at me to run, to hide, but there was nowhere to go. This gilded cage was designed by him, every lock, every window, every security measure under his absolute control.

"I' m not playing games, Hamilton," I said, forcing my voice to remain steady. I had to hold on to the last shred of my dignity. "I want a divorce."

He paused in the act of rolling his sleeve, his grey eyes narrowing slightly. "You' ve said that before, April. A hundred times, if I recall correctly."

"This time is different."

He finished with his cuffs and started walking towards me. I flattened myself against the wall, my breath catching in my chest. He didn't stop until he was towering over me, close enough for me to see the flecks of silver in his eyes, eyes that once looked at me with such adoration.

"Is it?" he asked, his voice a low caress that sent a shiver of fear, not desire, down my spine. "You think calling the police and making a fool of yourself makes it different?"

"I will do it again," I said, my voice barely a whisper. "Every day. I will scream from the windows. I will tell every reporter who will listen. I will make your life a living hell until you let me go."

For a long moment, he just stared at me. I could see the gears turning in his brilliant mind, calculating, assessing. He was the master of strategy, and I was just another opponent to be managed.

Then, to my utter shock, a slow, cold smile spread across his lips.

"Alright," he said.

I stared at him, bewildered. "What?"

"I said, alright," he repeated, his smile widening. "You want a divorce? You've got it. Let's go."

I couldn't process the words. It was a trick. It had to be. "Go where?"

"To get a divorce, of course," he said, turning and walking towards the foyer. He grabbed his car keys from the bowl on the console table. "The city clerk's office is open for another hour on holidays for emergency filings. A report of spousal abuse certainly qualifies."

My mind was reeling. This was too easy. Hamilton never gave in this easily.

He looked back at me, one eyebrow raised. "Are you coming, or have you changed your mind already?"

Suspicion warred with a desperate, burgeoning hope. What if he was serious? What if this was my chance?

I pushed myself off the wall, my legs unsteady, and followed him out of the apartment, not daring to speak, not daring to breathe, lest the illusion shatter.

The drive to the municipal building was silent and tense. Hamilton drove with his usual focused intensity, his knuckles white on the steering wheel. I stared out the window, watching the city lights blur past, my heart a chaotic drum against my ribs.

He navigated the bureaucracy of the clerk's office with ruthless efficiency. He was a lawyer in his element, charming a clerk here, citing an obscure bylaw there. Within thirty minutes, we were standing in front of a tired-looking official, the divorce application between us on the counter.

Hamilton signed his name without a moment's hesitation. The stroke of his pen was firm and decisive.

My hand was shaking so badly I could barely hold the pen. I looked at his signature-Hamilton Jones-the name that had once been my world, now just ink on a piece of paper that would set me free. A tear dripped onto the form, smudging the ink.

"Sign it, April," Hamilton said, his voice devoid of emotion.

I took a shaky breath and scrawled my name. April Banks. Not Jones. Never again.

The clerk stamped the documents with a heavy thud. "Alright, that' s filed. There is a state-mandated sixty-day waiting period. After that, if neither party contests, the divorce will be finalized."

Sixty days.

Hamilton turned to me, a look of smug confidence on his face. "Sixty days, April," he said, his voice low. "Let' s see if you can last that long without me."

He was so sure I would crumble. So sure I would come crawling back. The arrogance of it was breathtaking.

He offered to drive me home, but I refused. As we stepped out onto the cold street, his phone rang. I saw Brittany' s name flash on the screen.

His entire demeanor changed. The cold, ruthless lawyer vanished, replaced by a man full of gentle concern.

"Brittany? What' s wrong? Are you having another panic attack?" He listened for a moment, his brow furrowed. "Okay, stay right there. Don' t move. I' m on my way."

He hung up and turned to me, his face once again a mask of detached politeness. "Something' s come up at the office. You can take a cab."

He didn't even wait for my response. He just got in his car and drove away, leaving me standing on the sidewalk, the cold wind whipping around me. The divorce papers felt flimsy and unreal in my hands.

But as I watched his taillights disappear into the New York traffic, a new feeling began to solidify in my chest, replacing the fear and despair. It was resolve.

He thought he was playing a game. He thought he had sixty days to break me. He didn' t realize that for me, the game was already over.

I didn't go home. I walked to the nearest ATM, withdrew as much cash as I could, and checked into a nondescript hotel in a part of town he would never think to look. From the sterile quiet of the hotel room, I used a prepaid burner phone to book a one-way ticket to Europe, scheduled to depart in sixty-one days.

The next morning, my personal phone rang. It was Hamilton.

"Where are you, April?" he demanded, his voice tight with irritation. "Stop this nonsense and come home. We need to prepare for my mother' s birthday gala. Brittany loves gardenias, make sure the centerpiece is perfect."

The casual cruelty of him asking me to arrange flowers for the woman who destroyed my life was almost laughable.

I took a deep, calming breath. "We are in a legally mandated separation period, Hamilton. For us to cohabitate could be viewed as an attempt to reconcile, potentially nullifying the divorce application. I' m sure you, of all people, understand the legal risks."

There was a beat of silence on the other end of the line. Then, a low chuckle.

"You' ve been learning," he said, a note of something that sounded almost like pride in his voice. "I taught you well."

"I' m a fast learner," I said coldly.

"Don' t get cocky, April," his voice hardened again. "Get home. Don' t make me come find you."

Just then, I heard a woman' s sleepy voice in the background on his end. "Ham, who are you talking to? Come back to bed."

Brittany. They were together. Of course they were.

The sound should have shattered me. Instead, it was like the final click of a lock falling into place. It was the final confirmation I needed. The last, lingering ghost of love I might have held for him died in that moment.

"It seems you' re busy, Hamilton," I said, my voice utterly flat. "As you can see, I am not coming home. We are, for all intents and purposes, divorced. Please don' t contact me again."

Before he could respond, I hung up and blocked his number. Then I methodically went through my contacts and blocked every single person we knew in common. His friends, his family, our mutual acquaintances. A digital scorched earth.

The phone rang again, an unknown number this time. I knew it was him. I let it ring until it went to voicemail. A moment later, a text message appeared.

"You seem to have forgotten something, April. Your brother' s appeal. It' s a very complicated case. I doubt any other lawyer in this city would have the courage to take it on, especially against me. But you know me. I love a challenge. Come home, and I' ll see what I can do."

My blood ran cold. He was using Dudley. He was using my brother' s life as a bargaining chip.

I squeezed my eyes shut, the monster' s face swimming in my vision. He wouldn' t let me go. He would never, ever let me go.

            
            

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