
My fingers were still trembling when I finally dialed my grandfather’s number. The second he picked up, I heard my own voice—raw, hollow, barely a whisper. "The Halloway girl... the one everyone says is 'broken.' Is she still available? Tell them I’ll do it. I’ll marry her." The decision had been forged in the dark, born from a conversation I’d overheard outside the study last night—a conversation that had systematically dismantled three years of my life, my faith, and my heart. My fiancée, Jenny, was one of the top private security contractors in the country. Three years ago, she had kissed me breathless and promised, “Once this last mission is over, I’m yours forever. We’ll get married the day I get back.” Last night, I heard her giving a cold, sharp order to her second-in-command: "Xavier and the boy—make sure Oliver never finds out. About either of them." Her deputy’s voice had been hesitant. "But Jenny, Toby is two years old. He’s your flesh and blood! You faked that entire S-tier extraction mission just so you could go off and have him in secret..." The realization was a physical blow. Those thousand-plus days I spent waiting, worrying, and praying for her safety? They were nothing but a smoke screen. She wasn't fighting for her life in a war zone; she was building a life with another man. I had looked into her eyes when she finally "returned" a month ago, thinking the exhaustion I saw was from combat. Now I realized it was the fatigue of a woman juggling two lives, two men, and a massive web of lies. Her parting vow from three years ago still echoed in my mind, but now it felt like a shard of poisoned glass driven straight into my chest. That child, Toby, was over two years old. And I, the pathetic fool kept in the dark, was still busy planning our flower arrangements. The bedroom light was a harsh, clinical white, reflecting my own pale face in the vanity mirror. It showed me the ugliest truth of my life. This marriage to the Halloway heiress was the only life raft I had left. It was an escape—and perhaps the most cold-blooded revenge I could take. 1 "Oliver? What’s happened?" My grandfather’s voice was thick with shock. "You told me you’d never marry anyone else. You’ve waited three years for her. Talk to me, son." "The Halloway daughter... Felicity," I said, ignoring his question. "The rumors say she’s been hidden away since she was a child because she’s... 'not all there.' If she needs a husband to secure her inheritance, I’m his. I don't care about the rumors." "If you’re doing this because of pressure, I’ll fight them off for you," he insisted. "You don't have to sacrifice yourself to a woman who can't even speak for herself." I wanted to tell him. I wanted to scream the truth until my throat bled. But when I opened my mouth, only hot, silent tears spilled over. Everyone in the city knew I was obsessed with Jenny. I’d loved her since I was eighteen. Five years of devotion, followed by three years of waiting for a ghost. “The day I return is the day I become your wife.” I had lived on those words. I had ignored the whispers at every gala—the people saying she was probably dead, or that she’d taken the money and run. I turned a deaf ear to it all, counting the days, marking the calendar, waiting for my warrior to come home. By now, everyone knew that Oliver Thorne, the man who ran his family’s empire with a ruthless efficiency, had exactly one weakness: his bodyguard, Jenny. I understood my grandfather’s confusion. Even I couldn't wrap my head around the fact that her three-year "mission" was the greatest performance of her career. The line went quiet for a long moment. My grandfather must have sensed the shift in the air—the smell of something burnt and beyond repair. "If you’ve truly made up your mind," he said softly, "then I’ll back you. The Halloways have more power than God. At the very least, they’ll make sure you’re never touched again. I’ll send a car for you the day after tomorrow. Wrap up your affairs, Oliver." I sat there long after the call ended, clutching the phone like a weapon. Images of Jenny and her deputy kept flashing behind my eyes. It felt like a thousand needles were being driven into my heart simultaneously, the pain radiating through my limbs until I could barely breathe. She had cheated three years ago. She had fabricated a three-year war just to play house with Damian, her team’s medic, and their son. I couldn't hold myself up anymore. My knees gave out, and I hit the floor. Because of the "danger" of her job, she’d told me we couldn't have contact while she was deployed. I’d had to wait for her to call me—sometimes days apart, sometimes months. I spent countless nights staring at the ceiling, paralyzed by the fear of a phone call telling me she was dead, yet terrified of the silence that meant she might never come back. I had survived on memories of our five years together. I had built a temple out of those memories, only for her to come back and burn it down. As I sat there, lost in the wreckage, the bedroom door opened. Jenny walked in and saw me on the floor. "Oliver? Jesus, the floor is freezing. What are you doing down there? Are you sick?" 2 Jenny’s face was a mask of perfect concern. Her eyes, those beautiful, sharp eyes, were filled with my reflection—the same way they had been for years. Whether it was the five years we spent side-by-side or the month since she’d "returned," she had always treated me with a tenderness that made it impossible to see the lie. I quickly locked my phone and forced a weak smile. "Just a dizzy spell," I lied, my voice steady despite the bile in my throat. "Stood up too fast. Low blood sugar, probably." She sighed, a sound of genuine relief, and reached down to help me up. Her touch, which used to feel like home, now felt like a brand. "Let’s go to the coast tomorrow," she suggested, brushing a stray hair from my forehead. "I’ll have Xavier book the flights to the Hamptons. You’ve always loved the ocean. We can do the engagement shoot on the beach. What do you think?" She was as attentive as ever. But now, every word felt like a calculated move in a game I hadn't known we were playing. "I don't think so," I said. Jenny blinked, surprised. She gently stroked the back of my hand. "What’s wrong, Oliver? You seem... off. Did something happen? We promised each other, remember? No secrets. No lies." The irony was so sharp I nearly laughed. I looked her dead in the eye. "Jenny. Is there really nothing you’re keeping from me?" She didn't even flinch. A small, playful smile touched her lips. "What could I possibly be hiding from you?" I nodded slowly, swallowing the bitterness. "Right. Good to know. Let’s just sleep, Jenny. I’m exhausted." The next morning, we were jolted awake by a frantic pounding on the front door. Jenny opened it to find a man with bloodshot eyes, clutching a toddler—a boy about two or three years old. It was Damian. "Jenny, please... he won't stop crying for his mother. He hasn't slept in two days. You told me not to come here, but I didn't know what else to do..." Panic flared in Jenny’s eyes for a split second. She instinctively looked back at me, checking my expression. "Oliver, don't misunderstand," she said quickly, her voice taking on that "commander" tone. "This is Damian. He’s the medic from my unit. His wife was one of my teammates—my best friend. She was killed during the mission. I’ve been helping them out because they have no one else..." Before I could say a word, Damian broke into a sob. "Mr. Thorne, I know you two are getting married. I didn't want to be a burden, but the boy... he just keeps calling for his mom. I’m at my wit’s end..." I cut him off, my gaze fixed on Jenny. "The boy wants his mother, Jenny. Are you his mother?" She shot a warning glare at Damian before turning back to me, her expression softening into desperate innocence. "Of course not, Oliver. Look at him, he’s over two years old. I was deployed for three years—how could I have a child that age? Toby’s mother died saving my life. I’ve been a surrogate figure for them, and he’s confused. It’s a tragedy, that’s all." I looked at the boy. Even at his age, the shape of his eyes and the line of his jaw were an undeniable mirror of Jenny’s. My grandfather’s car was coming tomorrow. I didn't want a scene. I didn't want a confrontation that would keep me trapped in this house for one second longer than necessary. I forced myself to nod. "I believe you," I said, the words tasting like ash. "Go ahead and take care of them. I’m going back upstairs to rest." I turned my back on them. Jenny followed me, her footsteps hovering right behind mine. "Oliver, I’m so sorry. I’ll make sure this doesn't interfere with our plans..." But Damian called out again, his voice cracking with a practiced misery. "Jenny, he’s been sick. He hasn't eaten in a month since you left him... I need to take him to the hospital, but I don't know this part of the city. Please. If anything happens to Toby, I have nothing left to live for." I looked at Jenny. She hesitated, but her eyes gave her away. She wasn't annoyed; she was terrified for that child. "He’s just a baby," I said, my voice cold. "And his mother died for you. You should go. Take them to the hospital." The relief that washed over her face was sickening. Her tone became light, almost giddy. "I’ll be back as soon as he’s checked out. Oliver, thank you. Thank you for being so understanding." She didn't even change out of her lounge clothes. She ran to the door and scooped the boy into her arms with a practiced, maternal grace that shattered whatever was left of my soul. I watched from the window as they walked to the car—the father, the mother, and the child. A perfect family unit. I felt like I had been dropped into a bottomless trench. I kept sinking, deeper and deeper into the dark, until there was no sound left at all. 3 They didn't come back until the sun had fully set. I hadn't moved from the bed all day. I’d just stared at the shadows moving across the wall, counting down the hours until my escape. When Jenny finally entered the room, she looked guilty. A cold dread settled in my stomach. "Oliver," she started, her voice low. "Toby’s condition isn't great. The doctor says he needs long-term observation and a stable environment. They don't have anywhere else to go in the city." She paused, looking at me with pleading eyes. "This house is huge. I was thinking... maybe they could stay here for a while?" I closed my eyes tight, trying to push down the physical ache in my chest. That morning, she had promised they wouldn't interfere with our lives. Now, she wanted to move her secret family into our home. When I opened my eyes, they were clear. I was done. But before I could speak, Damian appeared in the doorway, holding the boy’s hand. "Mr. Thorne, please don't blame Jenny. She’s just worried about the boy. He’s been without a mother since the day he was born. Jenny has been the only mother he’s ever known. It’s only natural he’s attached to her." He continued his rehearsed, "poor-me" routine, but my attention was snagged by something else. A flash of silver around the toddler’s neck. My breath hitched. My hands gripped the duvet so hard my knuckles turned white. "That necklace," I whispered, my voice sounding like it was coming from miles away. "What is that around the boy's neck?" When I was sixteen, my grandfather hired Jenny as my personal shadow. I was never in real danger—until I was eighteen. One of Jenny’s old enemies from her mercenary days tracked her down. It happened in an alleyway behind a restaurant. The hitman fired a shot. I didn't think. I just moved. I threw myself in front of her. The hitman was killed by Jenny’s return fire, but I took a bullet half an inch from my heart. When I woke up in the hospital, Jenny was slumped over my bed, her eyes red and swollen. She looked like she’d been through hell. “From this day on,” she had sobbed, “my life belongs to you, Oliver. I will never fail you. I will never leave you.” She’d had the bullet they pulled out of my chest encased in silver and turned into a pendant. She kissed it in front of me, a sacred vow. “This is my talisman. As long as I am breathing, this stays with me. It’s the reminder that my life is yours.” I didn't know if her tears had been real that day, or if her kiss had been a lie. I just knew that on that day, I had given her everything I was. And now, that "sacred" talisman—the one she swore would never leave her body until she died—was hanging around the neck of another man’s child. Jenny’s lips moved, but no sound came out. She had no explanation. She just stood there, caught in the ultimate betrayal. Damian, however, stepped forward with a smirk he didn't quite hide. "This? Toby was a preemie. The doctors said he might not make it. Jenny was so worried she gave it to him for protection. He’s worn it since the day he was born." He let out a small, mocking chuckle. "And wouldn't you know it? It worked. This kid is a fighter..." "Enough!" Jenny barked, her voice cracking. "Shut up, Damian!" 4 Jenny grabbed Damian’s arm and hauled him out of the room. The boy started wailing, but I couldn't even feel pity for him anymore. All I could hear was Damian’s voice: He’s worn it since the day he was born. She’d given him my life—literally—before she’d even finished her "mission." Jenny didn't come back to the room. Hours passed. Then, through the silence of the house, I heard it. A sound that made my skin crawl. It was coming from Damian’s guest room down the hall. A woman’s voice, breathless and soft: "Don't... Oliver is still home. If he hears..." Then, the man’s voice, thick with a smug, suppressed hunger: "He won't hear. I locked the door. Come here, Jenny. Do you have any idea how much I’ve missed this?" The rest was a symphony of betrayal. I walked down the hall, my footsteps silent on the carpet. The door wasn't locked. It was cracked open just an inch. Through the gap, I saw them. And at the moment the tension in the room reached its peak, Damian turned his head. His eyes met mine through the sliver of space. He wasn't surprised. He was triumphant. He had left the door open on purpose. He wanted me to see. He wanted me to know that in this house, I was the ghost, and he was the master. I didn't scream. I didn't burst in. I simply reached out, took the handle, and gently, quietly, pulled the door shut for them. The next morning, I went downstairs. Only Toby was at the table, happily eating a bowl of something with a small spoon. When he saw me, he gave me a wide, innocent grin. "Uncle Oliver! Want some? Seafood porridge. It’s yummy..." Before he could finish, he started to gasp. His face turned a terrifying shade of purple. He clutched his throat and tumbled off the chair, hitting the floor with a heavy thud. I froze, panicked. Despite everything, he was a child. I rushed forward to help him, my instincts taking over. But then Damian’s voice exploded behind me. "Oliver! What did you do?!" He tackled me, shoving me aside with a violent force. He knelt over Toby, screaming his name. When the boy didn't respond, Damian looked at the bowl, then turned to me, his face twisted in a mask of rage. "You monster! If you wanted us gone, you could have just said so! He’s three years old! You tried to kill him!" He was screaming at the top of his lungs. "Toby is deathly allergic to shellfish! I never let him touch it! You fed him seafood porridge? How could you be so heartless?" I was reeling, my brain trying to catch up. "I didn't... I didn't give him anything..." "You didn't? What, did a three-year-old order delivery for himself? You were the only one down here!" Jenny appeared then. She didn't look at me. Not once. She scooped up the struggling, wheezing boy and ran for the door. "Stop talking," she commanded Damian. "Get to the car. Now." She hadn't said a word to me, but after eight years, I knew her silence. She blamed me. She believed him. As they brushed past me, I grabbed her wrist. My voice was steady, hard as granite. "Jenny. I didn't do it." She paused, a flash of pure, cold impatience crossing her face. "Let go. I have to save my son." The word son hung in the air like a death sentence. Damian shoved me again, hard. I wasn't prepared for it. I went down, my lower back slamming into the sharp corner of the marble coffee table. A white-hot flare of pain shot through my spine, and a cry escaped my lips. Jenny, who used to panic if I so much as stubbed my toe, didn't even turn around. She was already out the door, her world narrowed down to the child in her arms. I watched them disappear. My phone buzzed in my pocket. A text from my grandfather. The car is five minutes away. Be ready. I wiped the tears from my face with the back of my hand, gritted my teeth against the searing pain in my back, and hauled myself up. I didn't pack a suitcase. I took my ID, my passport, and my bank cards. That was all. Once I was settled in the back of the black sedan, watching my house vanish in the rearview mirror, I pulled out my phone and sent one final text to Jenny. It’s over. We’re done.
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