
Preston Rhodes ran out on our wedding five years ago. He didn't just get cold feet; he vanished. Now, he was back, standing in my office with a diamond ring in one hand and the audacity of a thousand men in the other, asking me to marry him. "Audrey, let's make this official." He gestured vaguely to the air, as if swatting away a minor inconvenience. "Bella gave me a son. My grandfather had to accept her into the fold because of the bloodline. The three of us... we can make this work." He held the ring up, twirling it between his fingers with a bored elegance. "Bella doesn't have your pedigree, obviously. I didn't have a choice." I looked up from the quarterly financial reports spread across my mahogany desk, staring at him as if he were a rare, fascinatingly stupid insect. Did this man miss the last century of social progress? Did he think he was living in a feudal fantasy because he forgot his medication this morning? He caught my stare and offered a smirk that was equal parts condescension and charm. "Why are you playing dress-up in this CEO role, Audrey? You should take a page out of Bella’s book. Give me a son. That’s the only legacy that matters." I swallowed the bile rising in my throat. Listening to him pontificate about male heirs and domestic submission was like inhaling toxic fumes. I let out a cold, sharp laugh. "Legacy is just a bedtime story insecure men tell themselves to feel important, Preston." I closed the folder with a snap. "Tomorrow, I’m initiating the hostile takeover of Rhodes Enterprises. If you’re going to work delivery to make ends meet, try not to be late. My time is money." 1 Preston had always been arrogant. He hated nothing more than being ignored. He snatched the report from my hands, his voice dropping to a growl. "You will never be half the woman Bella is, simply because you don't know how to be soft. What kind of woman treats her future husband like furniture?" When he saw my smile vanish, replaced by a glacial stare, he softened his tone, pivoting to manipulation. "Look, I know you’re hurt. But men of my status... we have needs. We have options. It’s the way the world works." He sighed, feigning the burden of nobility. "I know you’re still hung up on me leaving the wedding. But Bella was showing. I couldn't hide it. I had to be there for the birth. You can't hold a grudge against a mother and child." When Preston fled five years ago, I threw myself into the wreckage of my family’s company. I didn't have time for romance or heartbreak. Hearing these archaic justifications now, unearthed like dinosaur bones, I felt absolutely nothing. "You have thick skin, Preston. You think this is the 1950s? You think I’m going to sign up for a sister-wife arrangement?" Preston kicked his feet up onto my desk, crossing his ankles in his signature playboy sprawl. "Audrey, five years and you’re still so naive. In our circle, every powerful man has a side arrangement. The Sinclair family needs to save face, right? We’ll get the marriage license after I introduce Bella to Grandfather. You’ll be the official Mrs. Rhodes. That title belongs to you." He leaned back, examining his fingernails. "Besides, holding it all together while I was gone... it must have been exhausting. I’ve always said, running a conglomerate isn't women's work. Pack it up, Audrey. Go home. Cook me dinner." He leaned in, trying to turn on the charm, attempting to brush my cheek. I recoiled as if he were radioactive. Feeling my revulsion, Preston’s mask slipped. "Audrey Sinclair. Stop acting like a pristine saint. Take the damn ring. Do you really think you’re some untouched virgin goddess anymore?" The temperature in the room seemed to drop ten degrees. "It sounds like you know exactly what happened to me, Preston." For a split second, he looked like he’d swallowed his tongue. Five years ago. The engagement party. Preston vanished. That same night, a catastrophic explosion ripped through the Sinclair main distribution center. Inventory destroyed. Lives lost. Crushed by the humiliation of being left at the altar and the devastation of my family’s business, I spent my nights drowning in bourbon. And then, one rainy night, in a haze of alcohol and grief, I was assaulted by a stranger. After it was over, the man—satisfied and cruel—whispered the truth. It was Preston. To force his family to accept Bella, he needed to devalue me. He paid for the sabotage at the factory. He paid the man to assault me. The goal was simple: drag the Sinclair name through the mud so we couldn't sue for breach of contract, and drag me down to the gutter so I was no "better" than his mistress. I remembered lying by the window that night, staring at the rain, debating whether to jump. But I didn't. Instead, I buried the girl I was. I took over the failing company. I fought in the trenches of Wall Street. Not for love. Not for happiness. But so my parents, with their graying hair and bowed heads, could look the world in the eye again. "Audrey, stop fighting it," Preston said, his voice low. "I’m back. I’ll take care of the money. What else could you possibly want?" He reached out, grabbing my chin, trying to force a kiss. I didn't think. I reacted. The slap echoed through the office like a gunshot. I slammed my hand on the security button. "If you see this man again," I told the security team as they dragged him out, "throw him into the street." Preston didn't scream. He just smirked. "You’re fiery, Audrey. I’m the only one who can handle that. The ring is yours. I’ll wait for you to come to your senses." Being thrown out didn't stop him. For days, my office turned into a florist shop. Jewelry arrived by the crate. Lunch was delivered from his restaurants, a different menu every day. The notes were always the same condescending scrawl: Come back when you're done playing boss. I didn't even blink. I told my assistant to trash it all and block his number. We were in the final stages of acquiring Rhodes Enterprises. Negotiations and board meetings consumed my life. Preston Rhodes was a fossil, a relic of a life I had discarded. He meant less to me than the dust on my laptop screen. Just when I thought he’d given up, a text came through from a new number. Fine. You want to end the engagement? Come to the Rhodes Estate. It’s the only way you’re getting the contract back. The engagement contract? I almost laughed. It was a worthless piece of paper. But I was curious. I wanted to see the final act of his circus. The next evening, I walked into the Rhodes family manor. Preston was there, sitting on the velvet sofa. Next to him was the woman—Bella. She looked small, fragile, clutching a baby to her chest like a shield. Preston’s eyes raked over my tailored suit and short skirt. A smug smile tugged at his lips. "Audrey. You made it." He stood, moving to wrap an arm around me. I sidestepped him effortlessly. He leaned in, whispering, "That skirt... remarkably short. Trying to get a reaction out of me?" I gave him a look that would wilt flowers. He cleared his throat, pivoting to the room at large. "Audrey, I brought you here to settle things. Bella is gentle. She’s sweet. You’re... ambitious. Capable. You two will be like sisters. One big, happy family." Sisters? Happy family? The absurdity washed over me. He was still hallucinating. He actually believed that after the betrayal, the sabotage, the rape, I would settle for being the matriarch of his twisted harem. "Preston," I said, cutting off his delusion. "Is your brain still buffering? We aren't family. Give me the contract so I can leave. The air in here is stale." Preston’s face darkened. The charming façade crumbled. Before he could speak, Bella tugged on his sleeve. Her voice was a breathy whimper. "Preston, don't fight for me... She just... she can't accept her place..." It was a masterclass in manipulation, pouring gasoline on Preston’s fragile ego. He slammed his hand on the table. "Audrey! Don't be ungrateful! Bella has ten times the grace you do. You walked through that door, so you follow my rules." He pointed a shaking finger at the floor. "Bella, sit." Then he turned to me, his eyes manic. "You. Kneel. Pour Bella tea. Apologize for your attitude. Or you don't leave this house." Kneel? Serve tea to the mistress? I looked at Preston’s twisted face, then at Bella’s triumphant smirk hidden behind false tears. I didn't feel anger. I felt a profound, icy contempt. I stood my ground and smiled. "Preston. You really think you have the leverage here?" "You want me to kneel? There isn't a single brick in this house that the Sinclair Group doesn't effectively own right now. I haven't foreclosed yet out of pity." "And as for the tea..." My eyes slid to Bella. "She doesn't have the pedigree to accept a cup of water from me, let alone tea. It might shorten her life expectancy." "You bitch!" Preston roared. Veins bulged in his neck. He raised his hand, stepping forward. I didn't flinch. I took a step toward him. "Go ahead. Strike me. Let’s see what makes the front page of the Journal tomorrow: Rhodes Stock crash, or the last shred of your reputation obliterated?" Preston floundered, scanning the room for a weapon, desperate to assert dominance. "Fine. Fine! You need to learn a lesson. The old ways are best. You need a stick to learn respect!" "Respect?" I laughed, a dry, humorless sound. "Your version of respect is bankrupting your family to fund your affairs?" "Silence!" he screamed. "You’re drunk! Look at you, loose, drinking with men at business dinners... you need discipline!" "Drunk?" I had one glass of wine at a gala before coming here. Bella shrank into the sofa. "Preston... maybe she had too much... it’s hard for a woman alone with all those businessmen..." She framed me as a slut with surgical precision. Preston was panting now, consumed by sexual jealousy and inadequacy. "Who were you with? Which man? I’m not dead yet, Audrey! You’re cheating on me?" It was pathetic. "Preston," I said, my voice calm and sharp as a scalpel. "Instead of worrying about who I drink with, maybe worry about your liquidity? Worry about the three subsidiaries bleeding cash? Worry about the bank calling your father?" He looked blank. He knew nothing. He was a prince of nothing, signing papers he didn't read. "You... you're lying!" "Ask your grandfather. You’re a parasite, Preston. sucking the life out of your ancestors' legacy while you play house with your little bird." "Shut up! Shut up!" Humiliated in front of Bella, stripped of his delusions, Preston snapped. His eyes locked onto an antique ebony walking stick mounted by the fireplace—a heavy, brutal thing used for 'family discipline' in the darker chapters of the Rhodes history. He ripped it off the wall. "You disobey your husband! You act like a whore! I will execute the family law myself!" Bella gasped, covering her mouth, but her eyes were glittering with excitement. I watched him advance, swinging the cane like a madman. The fear was gone. Only rage remained. "Preston, if that stick touches me, the Rhodes family ceases to exist by sunrise." He hesitated, the cane hovering. Then, the madness took over completely. "Family law? You’re insane," I spat. "You drove me to this!" he shrieked. "Guards! Hold her!" Two burly house staff entered. They hesitated, looking at me—a CEO, a public figure—but Preston’s unhinged screaming terrified them. "She’s my fiancée! It’s a domestic matter! Hold her down or you’re fired!" "Don't you dare," I warned. But the men, fearing for their jobs, grabbed my arms. They forced me to my knees on the cold marble. My blazer tore. Buttons popped from my silk blouse, exposing my shoulder and bra strap. "Look at you," Preston sneered, looming over me. "Disheveled. Reeking of alcohol. Just like those women in the clubs." "You dress like a slut, you get treated like one." Bella chimed in, soft and poisonous. "Preston... she lived abroad... maybe she’s used to being... loose..." "Loose? It’s depraved!" Preston raised the heavy ebony cane. "I’m going to beat the defiance out of you. I’ll teach you what a husband is!" He swung. The wood cracked against my back. The pain was blinding. It stole the air from my lungs. I bit my lip so hard I tasted copper. Crack. A second blow. Crack. A third. The pain was a fire spreading through my nerves. The staff looked away, ashamed, but nobody moved. The sound of wood hitting flesh echoed in the silent mansion. My sweat turned cold. Blood began to soak through the silk of my blouse. I lay pinned to the floor, my body seizing with every strike. But I didn't scream. I didn't beg. I didn't cry. I lifted my head, shaking, and locked eyes with him. My gaze was a weapon. "Have you had enough? Will you submit?" Preston was panting, sweat dripping down his face, pointing the cane at my nose. "Agree to the marriage. Be a good wife. And I'll stop." I spit a mouthful of bloody saliva onto the pristine floor. My voice was a raspy whisper, but it carried. "Preston... go to hell." His eyes went wide with fury. He raised the cane high for a finishing blow— The heavy oak doors of the parlor groaned open. A voice, old and trembling with horror, shattered the moment. "Ms. Sinclair?! What... what in God’s name is happening here?!"
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