
Betrayed Heiress: A Storm Awakened Within
Chapter 5
Aliana POV:
His tall shadow completely swallowed me. Ivan's long, elegant fingers darted toward the elastic strap of my medical mask behind my ear. He was a man used to absolute control. He never allowed anything in his line of sight to defy him, especially not a lowly cleaner.
My pupils shrank. My heart hammered wildly against my ribs as I scrambled backward. My spine slammed hard into the cold, metal storage rack.
The old shelving unit swayed violently under the impact. On the very top shelf, an opened, heavy glass bottle of industrial-grade brush cleaner teetered on the edge.
"Stop playing games," Ivan warned, his voice as cold as ice. He was losing his patience. He hated women who played hard to get.
Out of the corner of my eye, I saw the bottle wobbling. My mind flashed to the countless times I had seen Ivan react to the tiniest speck of dirt in our home. He had a borderline pathological obsession with cleanliness.
I deliberately exaggerated my panic. I ducked to the side, hiding my movement as I drove my elbow hard into the rear support pillar of the rack.
The heavy glass bottle plummeted. It hit the concrete floor right between us and shattered into a hundred jagged pieces.
A pungent, explosive smell of turpentine and cheap chemical solvents instantly filled the cramped, windowless storage room. It was suffocating.
A few drops of the muddy yellow liquid splashed upward, landing perfectly on the pant leg of Ivan's five-thousand-dollar custom tailored suit.
Ivan's outstretched hand froze in mid-air. A look of absolute, unconcealed disgust erupted in his deep eyes.
I didn't miss a beat. I hunched over in agonizing pain, clutching my chest with both hands, and began to cough violently.
The harsh chemicals actually did burn my throat, making it easy to force out a series of loud, sickening retching sounds. I knew this was the only weapon I had to break through his psychological defenses.
Like a reflex, Ivan stumbled three huge steps backward. He quickly pulled a silk handkerchief from his breast pocket and clamped it tightly over his mouth and nose.
He stared at the foul stain on his trousers. The curiosity in his eyes vanished, replaced entirely by the revulsion of looking at a piece of rotting garbage.
Hurried footsteps echoed outside the storage room. The heavy wooden door was pushed open, revealing the gallery's overweight manager, panting heavily.
The manager took one look at the shattered glass, the spilled chemicals, and the livid face of his top-tier VIP client. His legs practically gave out. He started bowing and apologizing profusely.
Ivan shot one last, freezing glare at me as I continued to dry-heave. In his mind, I was officially nothing more than a vulgar, filthy bottom-feeder. His ingrained class arrogance meant he wouldn't stoop to look closely at me again.
He irritably tossed his expensive handkerchief into the nearby trash can. "Clean up this stench immediately," he ordered the manager, turning on his heel and walking out with rapid, angry strides.
I listened to the familiar sound of his leather shoes clicking against the hardwood floor until it faded away. Slowly, my coughing subsided. I leaned against the cold wall and stood up straight.
The manager angrily grabbed a handful of paper towels and threw them at me. He cursed me for being clumsy and told me to get out and go home immediately.
I kept my head down, hiding the sharp glint in my eyes. I thanked him in a hoarse, raspy voice, grabbed my worn-out backpack from the corner, and slipped away.
I expertly pushed open the heavy fire door leading to the back alley. I knew the blind spots. I completely avoided all the security cameras in the front lobby that could have captured my face.
The November wind in Manhattan cut across my skin like a knife. I pulled my cheap trench coat tighter around my body and walked quickly through two dimly lit blocks.
After checking my mirrors multiple times to ensure no black SUVs were tailing me, I ducked into a used Honda civic parked in a dark alley.
The locks clicked shut. It sounded like a gunshot in the quiet car. All the strength drained from my muscles. I collapsed back against the driver's seat, gasping for air.
I reached up and yanked the medical mask off my face. The rearview mirror reflected a face that looked somewhat like Kiera's, but colder, sharper, and far more refined.
For the past three years, I had given up my paintbrushes. I had given up my keyboard. I had dimmed all my own light just to stay home and cook for Ivan, to be his perfect, invisible wife.
And just now, the man who had shared my bed for three years couldn't even recognize my eyes.
I slowly lifted my chin and stared into my own pale reflection. The warmth in my eyes was gone, replaced by a thick layer of frost.
The pathetic girl named Hope, who begged for love and validation from a fake family, was dead. I gripped the steering wheel, my knuckles turning white.
"Ivan, the game has just begun."
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