The Caged Canary's Spectacular Comeback

The Caged Canary's Spectacular Comeback

Sophia Langley

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For seven years, I was known as the "Caged Canary"-the orphan ward of the ruthless Don, Autry Villarreal. I wore his silver star necklace like a dog tag, mistaking his cold control for protection. Then came the breaking news alert that shattered my world: Autry was marrying Cassie Turner to end a decade-long turf war. He didn't just break my heart; he let her destroy my home. When Cassie ordered a bulldozer to rip up the rose garden my deceased father had planted, Autry stood on the patio and watched. He chose political strategy over my only living memory of my parents. "It is necessary," he told me, handing me a briefcase full of cash to disappear. "This saves lives." I realized then that he wasn't my protector; he was my jailer. I left the money, discarded his necklace, and vanished into the night. Five years later, I returned to New York not as his ward, but as J.B., a Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer with a diamond ring on my finger from a man who actually cherished me. Autry didn't handle my freedom well. He cornered me in a car, staging a paparazzi photo to look like a passionate embrace, desperate to ruin my engagement. "I destroyed Cassie for you," he claimed, revealing he had leaked his own ex-fiancée's crimes to clear my name. "I cleaned the slate. I can give you the world now." He expected gratitude. He expected me to fall back into his arms. I looked him dead in the eye and posted a selfie with my fiancé instead. "I don't want your world, Autry. I'm done living in the dark."

Chapter 1

For seven years, I was known as the "Caged Canary"-the orphan ward of the ruthless Don, Autry Villarreal. I wore his silver star necklace like a dog tag, mistaking his cold control for protection.

Then came the breaking news alert that shattered my world: Autry was marrying Cassie Turner to end a decade-long turf war.

He didn't just break my heart; he let her destroy my home. When Cassie ordered a bulldozer to rip up the rose garden my deceased father had planted, Autry stood on the patio and watched. He chose political strategy over my only living memory of my parents.

"It is necessary," he told me, handing me a briefcase full of cash to disappear. "This saves lives."

I realized then that he wasn't my protector; he was my jailer. I left the money, discarded his necklace, and vanished into the night.

Five years later, I returned to New York not as his ward, but as J.B., a Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer with a diamond ring on my finger from a man who actually cherished me.

Autry didn't handle my freedom well. He cornered me in a car, staging a paparazzi photo to look like a passionate embrace, desperate to ruin my engagement.

"I destroyed Cassie for you," he claimed, revealing he had leaked his own ex-fiancée's crimes to clear my name. "I cleaned the slate. I can give you the world now."

He expected gratitude. He expected me to fall back into his arms.

I looked him dead in the eye and posted a selfie with my fiancé instead.

"I don't want your world, Autry. I'm done living in the dark."

Chapter 1

Jayme Barnes POV

I was waiting in the library of the Villarreal estate, rehearsing the confession I had swallowed for seven long years.

The silence was heavy with anticipation until the breaking news alert on my phone shattered my entire existence:

Don Autry Villarreal to Wed Cassandra Turner to End Decade-Long Turf War.

The phone slipped from my numb fingers, striking the Persian rug with a dull, final thud.

My heart didn't break.

It evaporated.

For seven years, I had been the Caged Canary.

I was the orphan he had taken in when I was fourteen.

I was the girl who wore his silver star necklace like a dog tag, marking me as his property.

I was the fool who had mistaken his cold distance for protection, not a lack of interest.

I looked down at the silver star resting against my collarbone.

He had given it to me when I turned eighteen.

"This star guides you home, Jayme," he had said, his voice low. "You are always safe here."

I had confessed my love to him that night.

I remembered how he had stepped back, his eyes hardening into walls of impenetrable ice.

He had told me I was his ward.

He had lectured me on the Code.

He had preached about duty.

But he had never told me about Cassie Turner.

The groan of the heavy oak front doors slicing through the silence pulled me from the memory.

Heavy footsteps echoed in the foyer.

I walked out to the balcony overlooking the grand entrance.

Autry stood there.

He was shaking off his coat, handing it to Mark, his right-hand man.

He glanced up, his gaze locking onto mine.

His eyes were dark, exhausted, and completely void of the warmth I used to see when I was a child.

"You saw the news," he said.

It wasn't a question.

It was a statement of fact.

"Is it true?" I asked.

My voice was steady.

I was proud of that.

"It is necessary," he replied.

He didn't come up the stairs.

He didn't offer comfort.

Instead, he turned his back to me and addressed Mark.

"Have the guest wing prepped. Cassie moves in on Monday."

The guest wing.

That was right next to my room.

"She's living here?" I asked, my grip on the railing tightening.

Autry looked back at me, his jaw tight.

"She is my fiancée, Jayme. This is her home now. We need to present a united front to the Commission."

"And what about me?"

"You are my ward. You will always have a place here."

A place.

Like a piece of furniture.

Like a pet.

"I'm twenty-one, Autry. I'm not a child."

"Then stop acting like one," he snapped.

The words struck me like a physical blow.

"This is business. This saves lives. This saves my men."

He walked into his study and slammed the door.

The sound vibrated through the floorboards, traveling up into my bare feet like a tremor.

I went back to my room.

I dragged a single suitcase from the closet.

I retrieved the deed to the small villa in Provence my parents had left me.

It was the only thing I owned that didn't have the Villarreal blood money stamped on it.

I looked at the silver star in the mirror one last time.

It didn't look like a guide anymore.

It looked like a target.

I unclasped it.

The metal felt cold leaving my skin.

I dropped it into a velvet bag along with the bracelet he had given me for graduation and the earrings from last Christmas.

I left the bag on the bed.

I walked out of the room.

I walked out of the house.

I didn't look back at the study.

I called a taxi to take me to Aunt Darleen's.

The driver asked if I was okay.

I told him I had never been better.

I was lying.

I felt like I was bleeding out, hemorrhaging from the inside where no needle could reach and no thread could stitch.

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