I was an artist who gave up my career for my tech CEO husband, Jakob. Pregnant with our child, I believed our life was a perfect dream built on his genius.
That dream shattered when I discovered his genius was a lie, built on stolen code. Then I overheard his real plan: to drug me, publicly ruin me, and auction off my body after murdering our unborn child.
At our anniversary gala, he forced drugged champagne into my hand. I watched him destroy my art-my last dream-before I collapsed, losing our baby on the cold museum floor.
They left me for dead, having taken everything-my love, my art, my dignity, and my child.
After I survived, I walked into the interrogation room where he was being held. I showed him a fabricated DNA report proving the baby was his, alongside a real document proving he'd had a secret vasectomy.
He broke down, believing he'd murdered the son he never knew he could have. "I'll do anything," he sobbed.
"Then sign these," I said calmly, pushing the divorce papers and a full transfer of his billion-dollar empire across the table.
Chapter 1
My perfect life. It felt like a warm, comforting blanket, woven with threads of shared dreams and unconditional love. Jakob, my husband, my rock, my brilliant tech CEO. Our penthouse apartment, a glass marvel overlooking the city, was a testament to his genius, his company's meteoric rise. I, Clara Stone, a burgeoning artist before love convinced me to put down my brushes, had built my world around him, around us. I truly believed in his "genius" software, the innovative code that promised to revolutionize the industry. I believed in our future, a future I had sacrificed so much for, happily.
Every morning, I woke beside him, the city lights still twinkling, and a quiet sense of contentment filled me. Our anniversary gala was approaching, a grand event at the city's most prestigious museum-the same museum where, ironically, some of my early, forgotten sculptures were still displayed in a quiet corner. I saw it as a full-circle moment, a beautiful convergence of our separate paths into one magnificent journey.
This morning, I was tidying up Jakob's home office. It was a ritual, a small way I contributed to his demanding schedule, making sure his organized chaos remained functional. His desk, usually a fortress of sleek gadgets and complex diagrams, was a bit messier than usual. A stack of files teetered precariously near his expensive ergonomic keyboard.
As I carefully restacked them, a loose panel on the side of his custom-built desk caught my eye. It wasn't completely flush. A small, almost imperceptible gap. My artist's eye, always attuned to imperfections, nudged me. I pressed it gently.
It clicked inward, revealing a shallow, hidden compartment. Curiosity, a dangerous thing, pricked at me. Inside, nestled on a velvet lining, was a sleek, unmarked USB drive. I picked it up. Its cold metal felt heavy in my palm, heavier than it should have.
A strange premonition, a flutter of unease, settled in my stomach. This wasn't like Jakob. He was meticulous, almost pathologically so, about his work. Hidden compartments and unmarked drives didn't fit his image of transparent brilliance.
I hesitated for a moment, my thumb tracing the smooth surface of the USB. Then, an insistent voice in my head, a whisper of suspicion I couldn' t quite place, urged me on. I walked over to his laptop, inserted the drive.
A folder popped open, labeled only with a string of numbers. Inside, a single file. `Project Chimera - Alpha Code (Final Build)`. My breath hitched. That name. Chimera. It was the name of the software that had launched Jakob' s company into the stratosphere. The software he had touted as his magnum opus.
I opened the file. What flashed on the screen wasn't a document, but lines upon lines of raw code, complex algorithms, and intricate data structures. My knowledge of coding was basic, but I recognized the elegant logic, the clean architecture. It was undeniably brilliant. Too brilliant for even Jakob to have created entirely on his own.
Then, my eyes caught a detail. A timestamp. Not Jakob' s usual development dates, but something older. Much older. And then, at the very top of the code, a comment line: `// Initiated by Elias Thorne.`
Elias Thorne. The name was a punch to the gut. Elias Thorne, the prodigy programmer who had died tragically in a car accident three years ago, before he could launch his own revolutionary project. Jakob had always spoken of him with a dismissive air, a brilliant but ultimately unlucky competitor. Now, here was Elias Thorne' s name, etched into the foundational code of Jakob's empire.
The room spun. My stomach lurched, bile rising in my throat. Elias Thorne' s code. Stolen. Plagiarized. Jakob' s "genius" was a lie. A cold, clammy sweat broke out on my skin. This couldn't be true. Jakob wouldn't. He couldn't.
My hands trembled so violently I had to grip the desk to steady myself. The polished wood felt rough against my shaking palms. I tried to swallow, but my throat was suddenly dry, constricted.
This perfect life, the lavish apartment, the glittering galas, the quiet pride in his achievements-was it all built on a stolen corpse? Was I living a lie, a beautiful, gilded lie?
A wave of nausea crashed over me, stronger this time. My vision blurred at the edges. My head throbbed. The air in the room suddenly felt thin, suffocating. I needed to get out. I needed answers. Now.
I snatched the USB drive, pulled it from the laptop, and shoved it into my pocket. My movements were jerky, desperate. I stumbled out of the office, the elegant, silent apartment suddenly feeling like a tomb.
The drive to Jakob' s office was a blur of flashing lights and distorted sounds. My mind raced, fragments of memories colliding: Jakob's boastful pronouncements, Alden Boyer's knowing smiles, the hushed rumors of Thorne's unfinished work. It all clicked into place with horrifying clarity. Each piece of the puzzle, once innocuous, now screamed betrayal.
I burst into the sleek, minimalist lobby of Johnson Tech, my appearance undoubtedly disheveled, my breath ragged. I ignored the receptionist's surprised glance, marching straight to the elevators, my finger stabbing the button for the executive floor.
As the elevator doors opened, a muted roar of laughter reached me from down the hall. Jakob's office. My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic drumbeat of dread. I slowed my pace, creeping closer, the sound of their voices morphing from distant hums to distinct words.
"-and she actually believes it," Jakob' s voice, thick with amusement, cut through the air. "The devoted artist, sacrificing her career for my 'vision.' It' s almost touching."
My blood ran cold. I pressed myself against the wall, hidden by a large potted plant, my ears straining.
Alden Boyer' s cynical chuckle followed. "Well, she' s certainly played her part. Made you look like the family man, the stable genius. All good for the IPO."
IPO. The company was going public. Billions.
"And the beauty of it," Jakob continued, his voice dripping with condescension, "is that she' ll be clueless until it' s too late. We sell, cash out, and then... poof. The fraud gets exposed, everyone points fingers at the dead guy, and I' m long gone."
"And Clara?" Alden asked, a hint of cruel pleasure in his tone. "What happens to our little artist then? When her carefully constructed world implodes?"
Jakob laughed. A harsh, ugly sound I' d never heard before. "Who cares? She' s a beautiful accessory, Alden. Always has been. A trophy wife who outlived her shelf life. Besides, we have the 'liability file,' ready to go if she even thinks about getting suspicious. Corporate espionage, a few doctored emails... she' ll be too busy defending herself to realize she' s been left with absolutely nothing."
"A pity about the potential heir, though," Alden mused. "Such a waste of good genes."
Jakob scoffed. "Please. Another mouth to feed? Another distraction? Besides, I wouldn' t want a child who thinks he' s a Johnson but is actually the spawn of some random hookup. It was your idea to seed a few 'tests' into the mix, wasn' t it, Alden? Just to ensure plausible deniability."
My hand flew to my belly. A sharp, agonizing kick. My baby. Our baby. The life growing inside me. They knew. They knew I was pregnant. And they were mocking it. Mocking him.
The world tilted. My heart wasn' t just breaking; it was shattering into a million icy shards. The warmth, the comfort, the love-all illusions. All lies. Jakob, the man I loved, the father of my child, had just casually dismissed our unborn baby as a "distraction" and me as a "trophy wife," while planning my public humiliation and ruin.
And Alden. Alden Boyer, whom I had always admired, Jakob' s mentor, a man I thought was kind. He was the architect of this cruelty. He was the one who had orchestrated this monstrous bet.
A cold, hard rage began to crystallize within me, pushing aside the raw grief. My tears, hot and stinging moments ago, dried on my cheeks. This wasn' t just betrayal. This was a war. And they had just declared it.
I mechanically backed away, the laughter from Jakob's office echoing like a death knell in my ears. My feet moved on their own, guiding me back to the elevator. I pressed the ground floor button, my finger numb.
As soon as I was in my car, I pulled out my phone. My hands were still shaking, but my voice, when I spoke, was steady, eerily calm. "I need an appointment. As soon as possible. I want to terminate my pregnancy."
My breath hitched on the last word, but I didn't break. The decision, born of the deepest despair and coldest fury, was absolute.
"Tomorrow morning." I said. "First thing."
The receptionist's voice on the other end of the line sounded confused by my abruptness.
"Is everything alright, ma'am?" she asked softly.
"Everything," I whispered, staring blindly at the city lights, "is about to change."
JAKOB JOHNSON POV:
"She' ll be a mess, trust me," Alden chortled, swirling the expensive scotch in his glass. "Clara Stone, the tragic artist. Reduced to sketching portraits on the street for spare change. It' ll be magnificent."
The thought of Clara, my beautiful, naive Clara, brought a smirk to my face. "She deserved it, really. Always so self-sacrificing. So pure. It' s exhausting. And frankly, a little annoying." I took a long sip of my drink. "She knew what she was getting into, marrying a man like me. A man who builds empires. You don' t do that by being soft."
Alden' s deputy, a slick-haired marketing whiz named Marcus, snorted. "She always seemed... a bit simple, didn' t she? Too caught up in her paint and clay. Never really understood the game."
"She understood enough to attach herself to me, didn' t she?" I retorted, a flash of irritation. "She wanted the lifestyle. The penthouse, the galas, the endless praise for her 'talent' funded by my money. She got it. Now she' ll face the consequences of her choices. It's on her."
Clara Stone POV:
His words, replayed in my mind, were a fresh wound. She knew what she was getting into. She wanted the lifestyle. How easily he twisted the narrative, sculpting a villain out of the woman who had only ever loved him. I remembered the late nights I' d spent with him, not at parties, but in this very office, bringing him coffee, listening to his grand plans, offering little insights from my artistic perspective that he' d sometimes incorporate into his presentations. I remembered selling my own small gallery, investing the meager proceeds into his fledgling company, believing in his dream. Not for the lifestyle, but for him.
His voice continued, sharp and dismissive. "Besides, this whole 'pregnancy' thing? A distraction. Completely unplanned, and frankly, inconvenient." He paused, then his tone hardened. "I told her, repeatedly, we weren' t ready for kids. She must have done something, deliberately. Trying to trap me, perhaps."
Marcus, ever the sycophant, frowned. "You think so, Jakob? Clara always seemed so... devoted."
Alden chuckled, a dry, rustling sound. "Devotion is a fragile thing, Marcus, especially when you' re facing a mountain of debt and a destroyed reputation. She' ll crumble. They always do."
"And the child," Marcus pressed, a slight unease in his voice. "What about the child?"
I clutched my stomach, a phantom pain ripping through me. No, I thought, not a child. Not anymore. The decision I had made, stark and brutal, had severed that last, fragile thread of hope.
"The child isn' t an issue," Jakob snapped. "I have no interest in playing daddy. There are games to develop, empires to expand. If she thinks a baby will tie me down, she' s sorely mistaken. I' d rather spend my nights debugging code than changing diapers."
Marcus looked genuinely surprised. "You really dislike the idea of being a father that much?"
Jakob leaned back, a sneer twisting his lips. "Dislike it? I despise it. This whole domestic charade? It' s a job. A public relations exercise. Nothing more. Clara served her purpose. Now, she' s just... clutter."
"Well, if she' s just clutter," Alden said, his eyes glittering, "then let' s make a game of it. The 'Clara Stone Implosion' bet. Anyone in?"
A chorus of eager voices erupted. "I' m in!" "Count me in!"
"I say," Marcus piped up, his voice regaining its slick confidence, "she' ll be begging on my doorstep within a month, offering... anything." His gaze lingered, making my skin crawl.
"Two months," another voice chimed in. "She' ll try to fight, make some noise. But when the liability file drops, she' ll disappear."
"Alright, gentlemen," Alden announced, rubbing his hands together. "The pot is... substantial. And Jakob, you' re doubling down, aren' t you? On her spectacular failure?"
"Of course." Jakob' s voice was clear, triumphant. "I' m betting on her total, absolute ruin. Every last penny she thinks she has, every shred of dignity she believes she possesses. Gone. Zero. Nothing. That' s my bet."
"I once saw her in a really tight dress at a charity event," Marcus interjected, his voice low and suggestive. "Bet she' d look even better... desperate."
I stood frozen in the hallway, the sound of their laughter and lewd suggestions washing over me. Each word was a physical blow, stripping away layers of my skin, exposing raw nerve. My breath hitched, a desperate gasp for air that wouldn't come. My chest felt like an iron band was tightening around it, squeezing the life out of me.
Monsters. They weren't men. They were monsters, feasting on my discarded dreams, my broken heart, and even the life I had once cherished within me. My hand instinctively flew to my still-flat belly, a protective gesture that was now tragically misguided. The child, my beautiful, innocent child, had been reduced to a bargaining chip in their cruel game before he even had a chance to breathe.
My legs gave out. I sank to the floor, my back pressed against the cold wall, tears streaming silently down my face. But these weren't tears of sadness. They were tears of pure, unadulterated fury. A cold, hard knot formed in the pit of my stomach, solidifying into unwavering resolve.
No. I wouldn't let them win. I wouldn't be their tragic artist, their broken trophy. They wanted a show? I would give them a performance they would never forget. A performance where the monsters became the prey.
I would take everything. Everything they valued, everything they built on lies. Their money, their reputation, their inflated egos. I would turn their game against them.
My first act of revenge was already set in motion. The life I had conceived out of love, the life they had so casually dismissed, would be unmade. Not because I didn't want it, but because I refused to bring an innocent soul into a world tainted by such venomous cruelty. This was the first step. The ultimate sacrifice, a declaration of war.
The anniversary gala. That was it. The glittering stage where they planned to humiliate me, where they planned to smash my sculpture, my last vestiges of identity. It would become their ruin. I would collect my evidence, meticulously, patiently. And then, I would strike.
I would make them regret every single word. Every single laugh. Every single penny of their disgusting bet. This was not the end of Clara Stone. This was the beginning of her silent, methodical war.
CLARA STONE POV:
The apartment, once a sanctuary, now felt like a gilded cage. Every polished surface, every piece of art, every thread of the expensive rugs screamed Jakob's lies. I walked through the rooms, a ghost in my own home, the silence amplifying the echo of their cruel laughter.
Later that evening, the front door clicked open. Jakob' s familiar, confident footsteps echoed in the foyer. My heart didn't flutter; it seized, a knot of ice in my chest. I forced a smile onto my face, a brittle masquerade.
"Clara, my darling," he called out, his voice smooth as silk, utterly devoid of the venom I' d heard just hours ago. He walked into the living room, shedding his expensive jacket, his eyes sweeping over me with a possessive gaze. "You look... pensive. Long day?" He leaned in to kiss my forehead, and I flinched internally, fighting the urge to recoil. His touch felt like a violation.
"Just tired," I murmured, pulling away subtly. "The gala preparations, you know."
He nodded, already distracted. "Right, the gala. It' s going to be spectacular. The pinnacle of my career." He walked to the bar, pouring himself a drink. "Here, you look like you need something to unwind." He held out a crystal glass, filled with a pale, amber liquid. "A special blend. Helps with sleep."
My eyes narrowed imperceptibly. A special blend. My gut screamed. My mind flashed back to Alden' s words: "We drug her champagne." Was this it? So soon?
"No, thank you," I said, trying to keep my voice light. "I' m not really in the mood for alcohol. Just tea."
Jakob' s smile didn' t falter, but a subtle hardening entered his eyes. "Nonsense. You' ve been stressed. One small nightcap won' t hurt. Come on, for me." He pressed the glass into my hand, his grip firm, leaving no room for refusal.
My hand trembled slightly as I lifted it. The scent was sweet, cloying. I took a small sip. The liquid slid down my throat, coating it with a strange, metallic aftertaste. A wave of dizziness, subtle at first, then more pronounced, swept over me. My eyelids felt heavy.
"That' s better," Jakob said, his arm sliding around my waist. The touch was repulsive. "You' ll sleep like a baby. We have a big day tomorrow."
He led me to the bedroom. I felt like a puppet, my limbs heavy, my mind foggy. I dimly registered him helping me into bed, his soft murmurs, then the darkness descended, thick and suffocating.
I stirred, floating in a haze of confusion. My head throbbed, a dull ache behind my eyes. My body felt heavy, alien. A sense of unease, a feeling of being watched, prickled my skin. I tried to move, but my muscles felt like lead.
Then I heard voices. Muffled at first, then clearer. They were coming from the living room. Jakob, Alden... and others.
I forced my eyes open. Moonlight streamed through the window, illuminating the room in shades of silver and grey. Slowly, painfully, I sat up. My gaze fell on the small, framed photo on my bedside table-a picture of Jakob and me, smiling, arm in arm. I snatched it, my fingers tracing the outline of the frame, and felt a tiny, almost imperceptible bump on the back.
My heart pounded. I flipped the frame over. Glued to the back was a miniature camera lens, barely larger than a pinpoint, wired to a tiny transmitter. My blood ran cold. They were watching me. Not just tonight, but always. This wasn't just a hidden USB drive; it was systematic surveillance.
A surge of adrenaline, cold and sharp, cut through the fog of the sedative. I needed to see. Needed to know. I fumbled for my phone, my fingers clumsy. With shaking hands, I carefully detached the device, then, using a QR code found on its side, I connected it to my phone. A live feed flickered to life. My breath hitched.
The camera was positioned perfectly, capturing the entire living room. Jakob was there, his face flushed with wine, a triumphant smirk plastered across his face. Alden sat opposite him, cool and collected. And then, I saw them. Two other men, faces vaguely familiar from company events, laughing, their eyes predatory. And a woman. A beautiful, striking woman with sharp features and a cold glint in her eyes. Jakob' s cousin, Lydia. I' d always felt an odd tension from her, a thinly veiled animosity. Now, I understood.
"She' s out cold, right?" Lydia asked, her voice sharp. "That sedative you gave her last night was strong enough to fell an ox."
Jakob chuckled. "Oh, she' s out. She' ll be sleeping until noon. Wouldn't want her interrupting our little... gathering."
My stomach churned. So it wasn' t just the nightcap. It was a prolonged, calculated incapacitation. And they had been doing this for a while. The constant fatigue, the headaches I'd dismissed as stress.
"The 'liability file' is ready," Alden stated, his voice devoid of emotion. "All the evidence of Clara' s 'corporate espionage' – doctored emails, fabricated transfers to offshore accounts – it' s all set. Timed to drop right after the gala, after the acquisition is finalized."
"Excellent," Lydia purred, her eyes raking over the room, over my things, with undisguised contempt. "And the child? The little inconvenience?"
Jakob waved a dismissive hand. "Irrelevant. I told her I didn' t want kids. She pushed for it. Her problem, not mine."
"But it complicates things," Marcus, one of the two men, interjected. He was eyeing the camera, a smirk on his face. "A pregnant woman being framed? Not a good look for the brand, Jakob."
Lydia leaned forward, her voice a low hiss. "We have a plan for that too. After the gala, after she' s publicly discredited, a little... 'accident' will take care of the rest. A fall, perhaps. Or a sudden, tragic illness. Nothing traceable."
My blood froze. They weren't just planning to ruin me. They were planning to kill me. And my baby.
"And then," Marcus said, licking his lips, his eyes fixed on the camera lens, "once she' s 'gone,' her assets can be liquidated. And what about... her body?" His voice was suggestive, chilling.
Jakob laughed. "Marcus, always the opportunist. We' ll discuss that later. There' s a certain clientele interested in... unique experiences. High-end, discreet. You know the type."
A new man, tall and muscular, with cold, unblinking eyes, stepped into the frame. He carried a small, medical-looking bag. "The sample for the 'test' is ready," he said, his voice flat.
"Ah, good," Lydia said, a predatory glint in her eyes. "Our little artist needs to be... prepared. We need to ensure she' s ready for the bidding."
Bidding? My mind reeled. What bidding?
"The 'victim auction' is gaining traction," Alden informed Jakob. "Clientele are highly interested in a woman of her... background. An artist, sensitive, recently disgraced. Adds to the allure, apparently."
The words hit me like a physical blow. Victim auction. They weren't just killing me; they were selling me. Selling my body, my very being, to the highest bidder for their depraved entertainments.
"And the ultimate humiliation," Lydia added, a triumphant smile spreading across her face, "is that she' ll never know. We' ll wipe her memory, make her compliant. A blank slate for their pleasure."
The man with the medical bag approached the camera, his hand reaching out. I watched in horror as he carefully extracted some of my hair from the bed, then took a small swab from my cheek. My heart pounded, a frantic drum against my ribs. They were collecting my DNA. My very essence, to be packaged and sold.
"She' s completely under," he confirmed, his voice clinical. "No memory of this will remain. We' ll ensure she' s perfectly compliant for the main event."
Jakob and Alden exchanged a triumphant look. "The gala," Jakob said, raising his glass. "The perfect stage. Her grand finale, before her new... career begins."
My vision swam. My body felt cold, clammy. I pressed my hand against my mouth to stifle a scream. The horror was too immense, too profound. They were not just betraying me; they were erasing me. Erasing my identity, my will, my very existence.
A sudden noise from the hallway. Jakob's head snapped up. "Someone' s coming!"
Panic flared through me. I fumbled to disconnect the camera, to hide the device. My fingers were clumsy, numb with terror. I stuffed the camera back into the photo frame, replacing it on the table just as the bedroom door creaked open.
Jakob stood there, his eyes scanning the room. My heart hammered. I forced my breathing to even out, my eyes to close, feigning deep sleep.
He walked over, his shadow falling over me. I felt his presence, cold and menacing. He leaned down, his lips brushing my ear. "Sweet dreams, Clara. Enjoy the last few nights of your freedom." He straightened, then left, pulling the door shut behind him.
I lay there, rigid, listening to the muffled voices from the living room slowly fade, then the front door clicking shut. They were gone.
Slowly, deliberately, I opened my eyes. The adrenaline coursed through me, burning away the last vestiges of the sedative. I was awake. And I was no longer afraid. Only cold. And calculating.
I reached for my phone, my fingers flying across the screen. I needed more than just a camera. I needed everything. I located Jakob' s personal safe, hidden behind a false panel in his study. The combination, a date he thought only he remembered, was etched into my memory. Our first date. The irony was a bitter taste in my mouth.
Inside, among stacks of legal documents and foreign bonds, I found another phone. Not his sleek business phone, but an older model, discreetly tucked away. I knew Jakob. He always had a burner. I powered it on. No password. He truly believed he had nothing to hide from me.
I scrolled through the apps. Normal stuff, then a hidden folder. I tapped it. A series of encrypted messaging apps appeared. My breath hitched. I clicked on the most frequently used one. A group chat. Labeled: "Victim Auction."