Kennedy tossed the papers back at me. They fluttered in the air for a second, then landed at my feet. The intricate onyx impression of Gregory's personal seal stared up at me, mocking my shattered dignity.
"There you go, Mrs. Maddox," Kennedy purred, a cruel smile playing on her lips. "Your freedom. Now you know your place. Out of sight, out of mind." She leaned into Gregory, her hand caressing his bruised cheek. "Unless, of course, you want Gregory to remind you again." The veiled threat hung heavy in the air.
I stared at the seal, a bitter laugh bubbling up in my throat. This object, a symbol of his trust and affection, was used not to validate our union, but to obliterate it. And by her. The irony was a cold, sharp blade.
Just then, a piercing shriek ripped through the ballroom. "Fire! Fire alarm!"
Chaos erupted. People screamed, pushing and shoving towards the exits. The elegant gala devolved into a stampede of terror. The scent of burning fabric mingled with expensive perfume.
I was knocked off my feet, the divorce papers scattering around me. A sharp pain lanced through my side as someone trampled over me. I heard Kennedy's high-pitched scream nearby.
"Gregory! Help me!"
My head hit the hard marble floor. Stars exploded behind my eyes. A wave of agony washed over me. My ribs screamed in protest. I tried to push myself up, but my body wouldn't obey. I was trapped, a human obstacle in a panicked crowd.
Then, through the swirling smoke and terrified faces, I saw him. Gregory. He was a beacon of calm amidst the pandemonium. My heart, against all reason, fluttered with a tiny, desperate hope. He would see me. He would save me. He had to.
His eyes, sharp and focused, cut through the crowd. They landed on Kennedy. He moved with the speed and precision of a predator, pushing through bodies, ignoring the pleas, the shouts. He reached her, scooped her into his arms as if she weighed nothing, and turned towards the nearest exit.
He hadn't even glanced at me. I was lying just meters away, struggling, bleeding. He walked right past me.
"Gregory!" I gasped, my voice a ragged plea, barely audible above the roar of the crowd and the blaring alarms. "Gregory!"
He didn't turn. He didn't falter. His focus was entirely on Kennedy, cradled safely in his arms.
A fresh wave of despair washed over me, colder than any ice. I tasted blood. He was truly leaving me to die.
Then, a sudden jolt. Gregory stopped. He gently lowered Kennedy to her feet, his eyes scanning the ground. My heart leaped. Was he coming back for me? Had he seen me after all?
He knelt, not beside me, but a few feet away. His hand reached out, not to help me, but to retrieve something small and glittering from the floor. Kennedy's bracelet. It had fallen from her wrist when he picked her up.
"My bracelet!" Kennedy cried, her face lighting up with relief. "Oh, Gregory, you saved it!"
Gregory smiled, a soft, tender smile. He fastened the bracelet back onto her wrist. "Of course, my love. Nothing will happen to what is yours."
My vision tunneled. I wasn't even worth a bracelet. I was less than an object. I was nothing. The sheer, brutal humiliation, the ultimate betrayal, finally broke me. The pain, both physical and emotional, became too much. I felt a cold darkness consume me as I succumbed to unconsciousness.
I drifted in and out of awareness, the faint smell of antiseptic filling my nostrils. The muffled sounds of a hospital. My body was a landscape of throbbing pain. Ribs felt like they had been crushed. My head felt heavy, swimming. A nurse leaned over me, her face grave.
"You're very lucky, Mrs. Maddox," she said, her voice soft. "Extensive internal bleeding. Multiple fractures. You were seconds away from irreversible damage."
I mumbled something, a question stuck in my throat.
"We need to operate immediately," she continued, her brow furrowed. "The surgical team is preparing now."
A flurry of activity. Bright lights. The cold touch of instruments. Fear, cold and gripping, tightened around my chest. This was it. I was going under.
Then, a harsh clamor from the doorway. The operating theater doors burst open. Boots thudded on the sterile floor. My vision swam, but I could make out large, dark figures. Gregory's bodyguards.
"What is the meaning of this?" a surgeon's voice boomed, laced with outrage. "This is an operating room! We're in the middle of a life-saving procedure!"
"Orders from Mr. Henson," a gruff voice replied. "The patient is to be discharged immediately."
"Discharged? Are you insane? She's barely stable! This could kill her!"
But their protests were futile. Strong hands, rough and unfeeling, gripped my gurney. I cried out, a weak, pain-filled sound as I was roughly pulled from the operating table. The world spun. My injuries screamed.
"Where are you taking me?" I whimpered, the words barely forming on my lips. My vision was blurry, but I could feel the cold tile floor against my back as I was dragged out.
No one answered. The doctors and nurses watched in horrified silence, powerless. The only sound was my own ragged breathing and the harsh scrape of my body being pulled away.
My last conscious thought was a chilling realization. Gregory wasn't just abandoning me to die. He was actively making sure I suffered first. I was not going to die on a cold operating table. I was going to die somewhere else. And he wanted me to know it was his doing.