Every word landed like a needle, like a blade, piercing through three years of silence and swallowed pain.
Chester grew more pleased with himself, towering over me, grinding whatever dignity I had left into dust.
"You actually thought I'd give you money? That card with fifty dollars a month? That was me being generous."
"All those request forms you filled out? I never even bothered reading them. Denied on the spot."
"You running a fever, you writhing in pain, you half-dead on the floor? In my eyes, you weren't worth a single strand of Florence's hair."
"Thirty million for her necklace, and I was happy to spend it. You? Fifty bucks, and I still thought it was a waste."
He grabbed a fistful of my hair and wrenched my head up, forcing me to look at him.
"Now get out. Get out of this house and never show your face again."
My consciousness flickered in and out.
All I could hear was his vicious cursing, Florence's hollow little laugh.
The pain in my body, the pain in my chest, spreading everywhere, threatening to swallow me whole.
Just as I was about to collapse, just as the darkness closed in around the edges of my vision.
The doorbell rang.
Chester scowled, irritation flashing across his face.
"Who the hell is that? Who dares show up now?"
The housekeeper shuffled to the door, trembling.
And there, standing in the doorway.
Were the police. And my mother.
The moment my mother saw my battered, bloodied face, she rushed forward.
"Ella! My baby!"
Chester froze where he stood. His eyes went so wide they looked ready to fall out of his skull, and every drop of color drained from his face.
He pointed at my mother, his voice shaking, nearly a roar.
"You... you're supposed to be dead! They killed the hostage!"
"The person in the photo was you! How are you standing here?!"
The room went dead silent.
The housekeeper, the bodyguards, Florence. Every single one of them stood frozen.
An officer stepped forward and gently helped me up from where I'd slumped against the wall.
I leaned into my mother's arms and looked at Chester's face, twisted with shock, contorted with disbelief.
Three years.
Three years of suffocation. Three years of tears. Three years of living like a ghost.
In that moment, I finally smiled.
I looked straight at him and spoke, slow and deliberate, every syllable a hammer blow.
"Chester. Look carefully."
"That request form. You never once bothered to read it."