The Runaway Wife: Escaping His Gilded Cage

The Runaway Wife: Escaping His Gilded Cage

Jing Buhui

5.0
Comment(s)
View
30
Chapters

Ava had been married to Wall Street titan Damian Carlisle for three years, an orphan chosen by his late grandmother solely to provide an heir. But at the matriarch's funeral, Damian stood intimately before the flashing cameras with his childhood sweetheart, Isabelle. The entire elite family deliberately excluded Ava, leaving her standing alone in the shadows. The guests whispered about how perfect Damian and Isabelle looked together, completely ignoring the actual wife standing right there. To Damian, Ava was nothing more than a piece of inherited furniture he didn't know where to place. Realizing she was just a discarded placeholder, Ava quietly left the estate and sent him divorce papers. But Isabelle secretly intercepted the legal documents to keep Damian in the dark. Enraged when he finally discovered her escape, Damian tracked Ava down to her shabby Brooklyn rental. He smashed through her door, physically dragged her out in the middle of the night, and forced her back to the sprawling estate. He installed new locks on the reinforced windows, pinned her to the bed, and coldly commanded her to fulfill her biological duty. "You owe this family, Ava. You were given everything, and this is how you will repay that debt." Trapped in the dark, a chilling despair washed over her as she realized a piece of paper could never free her. Against his absolute wealth and power, her rights and her tears meant absolutely nothing. But as her gaze fell on the corporate financial reports she had been secretly analyzing, her fear vanished. If the law couldn't beat him, she would use the only language he understood. She would accept the executive position at his rival's firm, dismantle his empire piece by piece, and personally ruin him.

The Runaway Wife: Escaping His Gilded Cage Chapter 1 The Outsider in the Cathedral

Eleanor Carlisle was dying.

The old matriarch lay propped against ivory pillows in the master bedroom of the Carlisle estate, her papery skin stretched thin over fragile bones. Her breathing came in shallow, rattling gasps. Outside the window, the gardens she had tended for sixty years lay dormant under a gray winter sky.

At her bedside knelt two people: her grandson, Damian Carlisle, and his wife of three years, Ava.

"Damian," Eleanor whispered, her voice a threadbare echo of its former strength. "Promise me. An heir."

Damian's jaw tightened. He glanced at Ava,then returned his gaze to his grandmother. "You have my word."

Eleanor's trembling hand found Ava's. Her grip, surprisingly strong even at death's door, closed around the younger woman's fingers like a shackle. "You... you are a Carlisle now, child. Promise me you will give this family a future."

Ava's throat constricted. She forced the words out, each one a stone sinking in her chest. "I promise, Grandmother."

The old woman smiled, her eyes growing distant. "Good. That's... good."

Those were her last words.

Three days later, St. Patrick's Cathedral.

Eleanor Carlisle's words echoed in Ava's head, each syllable a stone added to the weight crushing her chest. The old woman's grip, memorably strong even in death, felt imprinted on her wrist. A phantom pressure.

Ava stood beside a cold, Gothic pillar, the scent of lilies and old stone thick in the air. Her breath caught in her throat. It was a struggle to pull oxygen into her lungs, as if the cavernous space were a vacuum.

At the altar, the priest's voice droned on, a soothing balm of Latin and English that did nothing to calm the frantic beat of her heart. She lifted her gaze, searching the sea of black-clad mourners for her husband.

He stood in the front pew, a perfect effigy of grief, his jaw set, his eyes fixed forward. He was a world away.

Three years of marriage, and he was still a stranger. A handsome, powerful stranger who shared her bed but never his thoughts. The gaping chasm between the reality of their life and Eleanor's dying command was a cruel joke.

A bitter, humorless smile touched Ava's lips. An heir.

The final chords of the organ shuddered through the floorboards, signaling the end. The sound died, leaving a heavy silence in its wake. As Eleanor's polished mahogany casket was lifted by the pallbearers, Ava felt the last, tenuous thread connecting her to this family snap.

It was over. Her duty was done.

The mourners began to stir, a slow, rustling river of New York's elite flowing towards the grand doors. Ava moved to follow the core family group, a small, tight knot of power and old money.

But Damian's mother, Victoria, shifted just so, her back a rigid wall of black wool, blocking Ava's path. It wasn't an accident. It was a deliberate, calculated exclusion.

Ava was forced to slow her pace, falling back from the inner circle. She became an island in the stream. Glances slid over her, dismissive and curious. Whispers followed, sharp and indistinct, like the rustle of dry leaves.

Who was she, again? The orphan Eleanor had insisted upon.

A woman in a black Chanel suit leaned toward her companion. "Such a tragedy. But at least Damian has Isabelle. She's been by his side through all of this."

Her companion nodded. "Sterling and Carlisle. They've always been the perfect match. It's a shame Eleanor never accepted that."

"Well," the first woman said with a knowing smile, "the old lady is gone now. These things have a way of working themselves out."

Neither of them looked at Ava. Neither of them mentioned Mrs. Carlisle. The real one. The one standing right there.

A man, some distant cousin she'd never met, brushed past her, jostling her shoulder hard. He didn't apologize. He shot her an irritated look.

"Excuse me. You're in the way."

In the way of the Carlisle family's important guests.

She stumbled, her heel catching on the edge of a step. A firm hand steadied her arm before she could fall.

"Mrs. Carlisle."

It was Mr. Jennings, the family's longtime butler, his face a mask of professional sympathy. He pressed a folded, crisp white handkerchief into her hand. It was the first act of kindness she'd received all day.

"Thank you, Mr. Jennings," she said, her voice barely a whisper.

The handkerchief in her palm was embroidered with the Carlisle family crest. A lion rampant. A symbol of power and legacy. It felt like a brand. A consolation prize. She realized with a sudden, chilling clarity that she didn't want their pity. She didn't want their charity.

A few feet away, Damian's younger sister, Serena, skipped down the steps and linked her arm through Isabelle's. They shared a smile, a genuine, warm smile that looked so natural, so right.

Serena's eyes flickered towards Ava. The smile vanished. Her lips tightened into a sneer, and she rolled her eyes before turning her back completely, pulling Isabelle with her. A clear, brutal dismissal.

Ava stood on the bottom step, looking up at them. Damian. Isabelle. Victoria. Serena. A perfect, impenetrable fortress of wealth and power. And she was outside the walls.

For a moment, she let herself remember.

That silver Martin was a gift bought a few weeks after the wedding. At that time, she was too naive, thinking it was the beginning of something beautiful. symbolizing his care. A promise.

But Damian rarely came home after that first year. And when he did, he went to his own room. He never touched her. Not once in three years.

His face was everywhere-on financial magazines, on entertainment news, always standing just a little too close to Isabelle Sterling. The media called them "Manhattan's golden couple." The internet shipped them relentlessly. Damian and Isabelle.

She had begged him once. Cornered him in his study, tears streaming down her face, asking him to keep his distance from Isabelle. To remember he had a wife.

His eyes had been cold,Flat. "Isabel is my assistant. That's all. Don't overthink it.

That was the moment something inside her cracked. Then crumbled. She started seeing a therapist in secret, paying with cash so the family's accountants wouldn't find out. The anxiety attacks lessened. The depression lifted, slowly, like fog burning off a river.

And in its place came clarity.

He didn't love her. He had never loved her. The marriage was Eleanor's doing-a dying wish made while she was still healthy enough to enforce it. Damian had agreed because refusing his grandmother was impossible. But his heart had never been in it.

The Carlisles had never accepted her. An orphan with no family, no fortune, no name. She was beneath them. Always had been.

She had wanted to leave. God, she had wanted to leave so many times. But Eleanor's health had been failing for two years. The doctors said any stress could kill her. So Ava stayed. Suffered in silence. Played the devoted wife.

But Eleanor was gone now.

She finally understood. She wasn't a wife. She was a placeholder. A doll Eleanor had picked out, and now that the matriarch was gone, the doll was no longer needed.

A deep breath.

It didn't hurt. That was the strange part. It was just... clear. The fog of trying, of hoping, of pretending, had finally lifted.

Her gaze, no longer lost and searching, became sharp. Focused.

Isabelle must have felt it. She turned, her perfect smile back in place. She deliberately tightened her grip on Damian's arm and walked towards Ava, her expression one of condescending pity.

"Ava, dear," she said, her voice dripping with false concern. "You look a little lost. Do you need a ride? I can have my assistant's car take you back to the estate."

My assistant's car. Not our car. Not Damian's car.

Ava looked directly into Isabelle's triumphant, challenging eyes. She didn't flinch.

"No, thank you," she said. Her voice was quiet, but it cut through the air with the clean, sharp edge of breaking glass. "I don't need a ride from anyone."

The smile on Isabelle's face froze.

Damian, who had been staring off into the middle distance, turned his head. His brow furrowed. For the first time that morning, his deep, slate-gray eyes truly landed on Ava.

Usually, that look would make her shrink. She would lower her eyes, murmur an apology, and retreat.

She held his gaze, her spine straight, her chin level. She gave him nothing. No fear. Just a empty stillness.

Then she turned her back on all of them.

She walked away, her steps firm and even, in the opposite direction of the waiting line of black cars. She was walking away from the Carlisle name, from the suffocating estate, from the last three years of her life.

"Stop her," Damian's voice was a low growl. His jaw tightened, that familiar sign of his displeasure.

Two of his black-suited bodyguards moved instantly, materializing in front of Ava, blocking her path to the street.

"Ma'am," the first one said, his tone polite but unyielding, "Mr. Carlisle insists you get in the car."

Ava glanced back at Damian. Then he looked at the vehicles waiting in line. Her gaze drifted toward the silver Martin.

She thought of the tears she had cried over that car. The hope it had represented. The slow, agonizing death of that hope.

A laugh, dry and brittle, escaped Ava's lips. She reached into her handbag, her fingers closing around the key fob.

She tossed the keys onto the pavement. They landed at the bodyguard's polished shoes with a soft clatter.

A final, definitive severing.

She stepped around the stunned men, walked to the curb, and raised her hand. A yellow taxi, old and dented, screeched to a halt in front of her. She pulled the door open and slid inside, shutting out the world of Lincoln town cars and private drivers.

From the steps, Damian watched, his hand clenched into a tight fist at his side. He saw the taxi merge into the chaotic flow of Manhattan traffic, a flash of yellow swallowed by the city. For a flicker of a second, a look of something other than anger crossed his face. It looked like panic.

Inside the cab, Ava stared out the window, the city blurring past. She took out her phone. One by one, she silenced every contact related to the Carlisle family. Damian. Victoria. Serena. The estate's main line.

A light rain began to fall, speckling the windows. The drops streaked down the glass, washing away the city's grime. It felt like a baptism.

She reached into her bag again. Her fingers found what they were looking for: a slim, folded document. She opened it on her lap. It was a detailed career plan, a pathway back to the world of finance she had left behind. At the top, in bold letters, were the words: Chartered Financial Analyst.

Her real name. Her real worth.

"Where to, lady?" the driver asked, his voice a gruff Brooklyn accent.

Ava looked up, meeting her own reflection in the rearview mirror. Her eyes were clear. Resolute.

She gave him an address. An address far from the Upper East Side, far from the gilded cage she had just escaped. It was the first step into an unknown future.

Her future.

Continue Reading
Chapters
Read Now
Download Book
The Runaway Wife: Escaping His Gilded Cage The Runaway Wife: Escaping His Gilded Cage Jing Buhui Romance
“Ava had been married to Wall Street titan Damian Carlisle for three years, an orphan chosen by his late grandmother solely to provide an heir. But at the matriarch's funeral, Damian stood intimately before the flashing cameras with his childhood sweetheart, Isabelle. The entire elite family deliberately excluded Ava, leaving her standing alone in the shadows. The guests whispered about how perfect Damian and Isabelle looked together, completely ignoring the actual wife standing right there. To Damian, Ava was nothing more than a piece of inherited furniture he didn't know where to place. Realizing she was just a discarded placeholder, Ava quietly left the estate and sent him divorce papers. But Isabelle secretly intercepted the legal documents to keep Damian in the dark. Enraged when he finally discovered her escape, Damian tracked Ava down to her shabby Brooklyn rental. He smashed through her door, physically dragged her out in the middle of the night, and forced her back to the sprawling estate. He installed new locks on the reinforced windows, pinned her to the bed, and coldly commanded her to fulfill her biological duty. "You owe this family, Ava. You were given everything, and this is how you will repay that debt." Trapped in the dark, a chilling despair washed over her as she realized a piece of paper could never free her. Against his absolute wealth and power, her rights and her tears meant absolutely nothing. But as her gaze fell on the corporate financial reports she had been secretly analyzing, her fear vanished. If the law couldn't beat him, she would use the only language he understood. She would accept the executive position at his rival's firm, dismantle his empire piece by piece, and personally ruin him.”
1

Chapter 1 The Outsider in the Cathedral

Today at 13:44

2

Chapter 2 The Price of Freedom

Today at 13:39

3

Chapter 3 Intercepted Freedom

Today at 13:39

4

Chapter 4 Reunion at Obsidian

Today at 13:39

5

Chapter 5 Obsidian's Sanctuary

Today at 13:39

6

Chapter 6 The Showdown at L'Aura

Today at 13:39

7

Chapter 7 The Belated Storm

Today at 13:39

8

Chapter 8 Power Out of Control

Today at 13:39

9

Chapter 9 The Midnight Intruder

Today at 13:39

10

Chapter 10 The Prisoner of the Midnight Estate

Today at 13:39

11

Chapter 11 Broken Dawnlight

Today at 15:14

12

Chapter 12 The Prejudice of Obsidian

Today at 15:14

13

Chapter 13 The Impossible Task

Today at 15:14

14

Chapter 14 Crisis in the Flashbulbs

Today at 15:14

15

Chapter 15 The Ambush Dinner

Today at 15:14

16

Chapter 16 Freedom by Deception

Today at 15:14

17

Chapter 17 The Absurd Contract

Today at 15:14

18

Chapter 18 The Will's Shackle

Today at 15:14

19

Chapter 19 Dangerous Territory

Today at 15:14

20

Chapter 20 The Desperate Defense

Today at 15:14

21

Chapter 21

Today at 16:18

22

Chapter 22

Today at 16:18

23

Chapter 23

Today at 16:18

24

Chapter 24

Today at 16:18

25

Chapter 25

Today at 16:18

26

Chapter 26

Today at 16:18

27

Chapter 27

Today at 16:18

28

Chapter 28

Today at 16:18

29

Chapter 29

Today at 16:18

30

Chapter 30

Today at 16:18