Married To His Cruelty, Not His Love

Married To His Cruelty, Not His Love

Gavin

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I married a billionaire to escape my Appalachian roots, fully aware I was just a pawn in his toxic game with Kiarra, the woman he was truly obsessed with. I thought I knew the rules, until he let her bulldoze my childhood home for a new resort, leaving my deaf-mute mother injured in the dust. He stood by as her friends beat me senseless. He broke my arm. When I finally fought back after Kiarra threatened my mother, he broke it again, his face a mask of cold fury. His final act of cruelty was forcing me to my knees in a crowded bar, ordering me to bark like a dog for their friends' amusement. As I knelt there, humiliated and broken, I looked to my husband for a shred of mercy. He just turned away and kissed Kiarra passionately, sealing my fate with her lipstick. They thought they had destroyed the "mountain mouse." But as I boarded a private jet with a divorce settlement that could cripple his empire, I knew my story wasn't over. It was just beginning.

Chapter 1

I married a billionaire to escape my Appalachian roots, fully aware I was just a pawn in his toxic game with Kiarra, the woman he was truly obsessed with.

I thought I knew the rules, until he let her bulldoze my childhood home for a new resort, leaving my deaf-mute mother injured in the dust.

He stood by as her friends beat me senseless. He broke my arm.

When I finally fought back after Kiarra threatened my mother, he broke it again, his face a mask of cold fury.

His final act of cruelty was forcing me to my knees in a crowded bar, ordering me to bark like a dog for their friends' amusement.

As I knelt there, humiliated and broken, I looked to my husband for a shred of mercy. He just turned away and kissed Kiarra passionately, sealing my fate with her lipstick.

They thought they had destroyed the "mountain mouse." But as I boarded a private jet with a divorce settlement that could cripple his empire, I knew my story wasn't over. It was just beginning.

Chapter 1

Alana POV:

The phone buzzed in my hand, vibrating against the black silk of my dress. I was standing by my father' s grave, the fresh dirt still soft under my heels. The eulogy was just ending, my mother's silent tears a stark contrast to the quiet Appalachian morning. I ignored the notification. It buzzed again, insistent.

My thumb brushed the screen. A message. From Kiarra Nolan.

My breath hitched. My fingers trembled, making the phone shake.

Look familiar, darling?

Below the text, a picture loaded. It was a selfie, taken at a strange angle.

Clayton. His arm was draped around Kiarra' s bare shoulders. Kiarra, her head thrown back, laughing. Her red lipstick was smudged, a streak across Clayton' s jaw.

They were in a car. A familiar one. Clayton' s sleek black sedan.

And outside the window, blurred but unmistakable, was the marble archway of this very cemetery. The one my father had helped build with his own hands. The one where he was now buried.

A cold knot twisted in my stomach. Not just the photo. The message that followed.

He' s mine, Alana. Always has been. And always will be. You' re just a temporary distraction. A charity case he picked up off the street. Happy anniversary, by the way. To your daddy, I mean.

My vision blurred. Not with tears. With a sudden, white-hot surge of rage.

My father, who had worked tirelessly, his hands calloused from stone. My father, who had taught me quiet dignity. Desecrated. On his death day.

Right here. In this parking lot. While his wife grieved. While his daughter stood numb with loss.

Clayton. My husband.

A low growl rumbled in my chest. So raw it felt foreign.

My mother, her face etched with sorrow, reached for my hand. Her touch brought me back.

I squeezed her hand gently. My face was a mask. My smile, thin and brittle, didn' t reach my eyes.

Not yet, I thought. Not here.

I stepped away, walking slowly towards the edge of the small crowd. My heart hammered against my ribs. It felt like it was trying to claw its way out.

I pulled out the burner phone I kept hidden. Berneice Chase' s private number was already programmed. I pressed dial.

It rang once. Twice. Then a crisp, sharp voice answered. "This better be important, Alana."

"It is," I said, my voice steady, betraying none of the earthquake inside me. "I want a divorce."

There was a pregnant pause. "Finally," Berneice said, a sigh escaping her lips. "I always knew you had more sense than to stay in that farce. What are your terms?"

"My terms," I repeated, the words tasting like metal. "I want half of everything Clayton owns. Not his trust fund. His personal assets. The ones he keeps separate."

"Ambitious," Berneice mused. "But achievable. Clayton' s personal investments have been... significant. And he' s been rather careless with his paper trail lately. Kiarra' s influence, I suspect."

"I also want seed money," I continued, my gaze sweeping over the rolling hills of Appalachia, my home. "A substantial amount. Enough to start a business. Any business I choose."

"That can be arranged," she said. "Anything else?"

"Connections," I said, my voice dropping to a low, firm tone. "Introductions. To the right people. In Europe. The fashion industry. I want a clean break. A total disappearance."

Berneice chuckled, a dry, humorless sound. "You're asking for quite a lot, Alana. Was your love for my son truly that shallow? That easily bought?"

I closed my eyes for a brief moment. A wave of bitterness washed over me. "My love for Clayton," I said, forcing a faint tremor into my voice, "was the only real thing in my life. It was a lifeline. But even a lifeline can snap when stretched too thin."

"Clever girl," Berneice said, her voice devoid of warmth. "I don't believe you for a second. But cleverness I can work with. Consider it done. You have one week to finalize everything. And then, you vanish."

"One week, then," I agreed. "Thank you, Berneice."

I hung up, clutching the phone. The bitter taste of ash filled my mouth.

Clayton. His face, so handsome, so oblivious. My husband. How had I ended up here?

It had started long before the wedding. Clayton and Kiarra. A toxic dance, a destructive obsession. He would pull stunts, wild, dangerous things, all to catch her attention. And Kiarra, cruel and calculating, loved to watch him squirm. She gloried in the power she held over him.

I was just a scholarship student then, at the same elite NYC university. Invisible. Until I wasn't.

One night, I saw him. On the edge of a skyscraper, balancing precariously. Kiarra below, laughing with her friends, daring him. He was a breath away from falling.

I called security, anonymously. Then again. And again. I saved his reckless life, time after time. He never knew it was me.

Then came the public rejection. Kiarra, at a charity gala, publicly humiliating him. Calling him "a puppy on a leash."

He was furious. Humiliated. And I was there, a quiet, unassuming girl, always somehow in his orbit. He saw me. Or rather, he saw a tool. A way to hurt Kiarra back.

"Marry me, Alana Beck," he'd said, his eyes blazing with a cold fire I mistook for something else. "Show her what she lost."

I said yes. A poor girl from Appalachia. Deaf-mute parents. A scholarship student who cleaned dorms to make ends meet. He was a ticket out. A chance at security. A chance at revenge against a world that had always looked down on me.

The media went wild. "The Billionaire and the Backwoods Belle." Society scoffed. They gave us three months.

But then something shifted. Briefly.

He was surprisingly attentive at first. He bought me clothes, jewels. Not out of love, I knew. But out of pride. I was his trophy now.

Once, a reporter wrote a particularly nasty piece, mocking my upbringing, calling me "the mountain mouse." Clayton, without a word, bought the entire publication and shut it down.

He said, "No one talks about my wife like that."

The world gasped. We lasted three years. A seemingly perfect marriage. A gilded cage.

Then Kiarra came back. Like a persistent infection.

The texts started. Anonymous at first. Vicious. Degrading.

You're still just a hillbilly, Alana. No amount of money can fix that.

He calls my name in his sleep. Not yours.

Then the pictures. Kiarra' s hand, resting on Clayton' s thigh at a restaurant. Kiarra' s lipstick on his collar.

The latest one. The cemetery. It was the final, brutal blow.

I stared at the black screen of my phone. No. I wasn't Alana Beck, the hillbilly girl who cleaned dorms. Not anymore. I was Alana Chase. And my father's memory would not be disrespected. Not by Kiarra. Not by Clayton.

My childhood. It played out in my mind. The old, rickety house. The worn-out clothes. The taunts from town kids.

"Deafie's daughter. Can't hear, can't speak, can't be anything."

Kiarra. The first time I saw her. At a university event. She' d laughed at my worn dress, spilling wine on me deliberately.

"Oh, look," she'd sneered, her eyes raking over my embarrassed form. "The help. You really shouldn't try to mingle with your betters, darling."

That moment. It was a spark. A silent vow. I would never be "the help" again. I would never be looked down upon. I would climb. I would claw my way to the top. I would have power.

Clayton was a means to an end. I knew it. I admitted it, even to myself. His money. His name. Access.

But I never thought he would sink this low. I never thought he would betray me so completely. Desecrate my grief.

Now, Kiarra was relentless. She wanted him back. And Clayton, like a moth to a flame, kept circling her.

I' d seen it in his eyes. He might be possessive of me, but he was obsessed with her. Any shred of doubt I had left, any flicker of hope that he might truly care, had died in that cemetery parking lot. He had no bottom line when it came to Kiarra. None.

I had to get out. But not just out. I had to secure my future. And I would make them pay. Both of them.

Later that day, back in the penthouse, I found them. Kiarra perched on the arm of Clayton' s sofa, her fingers tracing his jawline. Clayton, leaning back, a smirk on his face. They looked like two predators, smug and satisfied.

"Alana, darling," Kiarra purred, her eyes glittering with malice. "You're back. We were just discussing your... rather rustic childhood home."

Clayton cleared his throat. "Kiarra has some... interesting ideas for a new resort project. She thinks your old town, Beck's Hollow, has potential."

My blood ran cold. "My home?" I managed, my voice barely a whisper. "What about it?"

Kiarra giggled, a high, tinkling sound. "Oh, we're going to transform it, sweetie. Bulldoze all those charming, dilapidated shacks. Make way for luxury. Your little house? It's right in the middle of the prime land."

Clayton shifted uncomfortably. "It's just business, Alana. We'll offer a fair price. More than fair, actually."

My heart shattered into a million pieces. Not just the photo. Not just the public humiliation. My home. My father's memory. Even that was just a piece of land to be bulldozed for her resort.

"You can't," I breathed, my voice thick with unshed tears. "That's... that's my family's land."

Clayton shrugged, refusing to meet my eyes. "It's already been signed, Alana. Kiarra loved the location. It's happening."

My world tilted. The air left my lungs. He let her do this. He signed it. My husband.

Kiarra smiled, a triumphant, venomous curve of her lips. "Don't worry, Alana. We'll send you a postcard from the new pool deck."

I turned, my gaze fixed on Clayton. His face was impassive. He had chosen her. Over everything.

My resolve hardened, turning to solid steel. This is it, I thought. This is where it ends. And where I begin.

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