Chapter 101: The Call
Three days had bled together, slipping past Eliana Bennett like sand refusing to stay in her grasp. Every sunrise seemed heavier than the one before, pressing on her chest with a weight she couldn’t shake. She had tucked herself away in Henry Jackson’s apartment—a sleek sanctuary in the middle of the city.
It wasn’t the sprawling grandeur of the Vexley mansion, all polished marble and suffocating wealth, but it was something rarer. Safe. Human. Warm. The apartment itself was a contradiction: modest in size yet rich in detail. Clean lines, soft leather, books stacked with careless intention. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlooked the restless city, headlights streaking like veins of light beneath her. At night, she’d stand there, palms against the cool glass, watching the streets below and wondering if anyone could see her watching back.
Henry moved through the space like it belonged to him and yet never intruded on her silence. Tall, broad-shouldered, with a presence that was steady rather than overwhelming, he carried an ease that softened the edges of her turmoil. His eyes—those deep, unassuming blue eyes—seemed to catch her every unspoken word.
They had history, though barely more than whispers of it. A handful of college encounters, half-smiles traded in crowded lecture halls, brief conversations that died the moment Jason stepped into her orbit. Back then, Henry was just background. A possibility she never entertained because her life was already chained to someone else’s gravity.
But now, at twenty-six, things felt different. He had become more than the boy she overlooked. He was Henry Jackson, the son of a wealthy family who could’ve leaned on privilege but instead chose a grueling path—medicine. An aspiring doctor with tired hands and a heart big enough to hold her storms.
And the way he treated her here, in this apartment above the noise of the city, was nothing short of reverence. He didn’t demand her confessions, didn’t push for more than she could give. He simply made space—quietly, patiently—until she could breathe again.
The first morning after her escape, Eliana had woken to the nauseating churn of morning sickness, her slender body curled on the plush guest bed, warm brown skin flushed with discomfort. Henry had been there instantly, his sharp features softening as he knelt beside her, a cool cloth in hand.
"Eliana, hey, take it easy," he murmured, his voice steady like a lifeline. "Breathe through it. I’ve got some ginger tea brewing—my med school rotations taught me a thing or two about this. You’re not alone in this, okay?"
She looked up at him through tear-streaked honey eyes, her lips trembling. "Henry... I don’t know how to thank you. I feel like such a burden. This baby... and Rafael... I can’t even turn on my phone. What if he hates me? What if he thinks I betrayed him?"
Henry shook his head, his handsome face etched with concern as he helped her sit up, arranging pillows behind her back with careful hands. "You’re no burden, Eli. Never have been. Remember that party back in college? Jason’s bash? I saw you across the room, laughing like the world was yours. I fell for you right then, but I kept it hidden because... well, you were with him. And now? Seeing you like this? It kills me, but I’ll help you through it. You will never be a burden to me. Turn the phone on when you’re ready. But you have to tell Rafael the truth. He’s the father—he deserves to know and the other truth as well."
Eliana nodded weakly, her long, black curly hair spilling over her shoulders like a dark waterfall. She wore one of Henry’s oversized shirts over her modest, worn-out clothes, the fabric soft against her skin. "I know... but the thought of facing him terrifies me. My mother—Mirabel—she’s his stepmother. How do I even begin to explain that? That she’s the one who abandoned me and Dad? That meeting her at Rafael’s house had only been a coincidence?"
Henry placed the steaming mug in her hands, his warm eyes locking onto hers. "One step at a time. Drink this—it’ll settle your stomach. And listen, secrets like that? They fester. Tell him before it explodes. I’ll be here, every step."
As the day wore on, Henry treated her like royalty in his own quiet way. He prepared light meals—fresh fruit salads dusted with mint, soothing soups that eased her queasiness—insisting she rest on the balcony where the city hum provided a distracting symphony. They talked for hours, her emotional resilience shining through as she shared stories of her sickly father and the poverty that had shaped her. Henry listened, his reserved ambition giving way to raw empathy.
"You’re stronger than you know, Eli," he said that evening, as they sat on the couch, the sunset painting the room in golden hues. "That quiet strength of yours? It’s what drew me to you. But suffering in silence? That’s your flaw talking. Don’t let it win."
She managed a hopeful smile, hiding the wounds behind it. "You’re too kind, Henry. What about you? Still very passionate about your doctor’s dream?"
He chuckled softly, a rare spark of humor lightening the moment. "Oh yeah, buried in textbooks and shifts. But hey, if I can handle dissecting cadavers, I can handle a little morning sickness duty. Just promise me you’ll think about calling him."
Eliana sighed, her expressive eyes clouding. "I will... tomorrow. Maybe."
The second day mirrored the first, but with deeper conversations. Morning sickness struck again, and Henry was there with crackers and electrolyte drinks, his athletic grace making even the simplest tasks seem effortless. He encouraged her gently, never pushing too hard, but his words lingered like echoes.
"Eli, time’s ticking," he said over lunch, a gourmet sandwich he’d whipped up from his well-stocked kitchen. "Rafael’s probably going crazy without you. You said he’s been betrayed several times—imagine what he’s thinking now. Betrayal? You owe it to yourself, to the baby, to clear the air."
She toyed with her food, her heart-shaped face pale. "I know, Henry. But what if he doesn’t believe me? What if his fears has poisoned him against me already? My phone’s been off because... because I’m scared. Of losing him, of everything crumbling."
Henry reached across the table, his hand covering hers in a platonic yet protective gesture. "Then you fight for the truth. And if it goes south? I’ve got your back. I’m not letting anyone hurt you—not Rafael, not Mirabel, nobody."
By the third day, the weight of indecision had become unbearable. Eliana paced the apartment, her natural elegance evident even in her rumpled state. Henry watched from the kitchen, preparing a light breakfast, his sharp features tense with worry.
"You look like you’re ready to bolt again," he teased lightly, trying to inject some humor. "But seriously, Eli—today’s the day, right? You’ve got that fire in your eyes."
She stopped, turning to him with a determined nod, her voice steady despite the emotion churning inside. "Yes. I can’t hide forever. The baby’s real, Henry. Rafael needs to know about the pregnancy, about Mirabel being my mother... all of it. It’s time."
Henry set down the plate, his warm eyes gleaming with pride. "That’s my girl. Proud of you. And listen—I’ll be on standby. Drive you there if you need, wait outside. If Rafael so much as raises his voice in a way that hurts you, I’m coming in. Promise."
Eliana’s lips curved into a genuine smile, tears glistening. "Thank you, Henry. For everything. You’re a true friend—more than I deserve."
He pulled her into a brief, brotherly hug. "You deserve the world, Eli. Now go—pick up that phone."
With trembling fingers, she powered on her device, the screen lighting up with missed calls and messages, most from Rafael. Her heart pounded as she dialed his number, the ring echoing in her ears like a drumbeat of fate.
Meanwhile, across the city in the sprawling Vexley estate, Rafael Vexley had been unraveling like a tightly wound spring finally snapping. The billionaire recluse, once a master of control, was now a shadow of himself. His piercing grey eyes, no longer pretending to be clouded, stared blankly at the walls of his opulent study. Dark wavy hair disheveled, his athletic build slumped in designer suits that hung loosely from lack of appetite. For three days, he’d been a mess—pacing endless nights, snapping at staff, drowning in a cocktail of betrayal and longing.
The first day after viewing the footage, rage had consumed him. "James!" he’d barked into the intercom, his chiseled jaw clenched. "Get Clara. Now. Go to the warehouse—I want answers."
James, ever the shadow in Rafael’s service, had executed the plan with merciless precision. Clara—once just a quiet maid drifting unnoticed through the halls of the Vexley mansion—was now a prisoner. Blindfolded and trembling, she had been dragged down into the warehouse underbelly, a place that smelled of rust, oil, and secrets never meant to see daylight.
The blindfold was yanked off, and the first thing she saw was Rafael. Not the polished, untouchable billionaire the world revered, but the man stripped down to raw power and simmering fury. He didn’t need chains to hold her in place; his presence alone pinned her to the chair, as if the air itself bowed to his command.
"Tell me everything," Rafael’s voice cut through the silence, smooth but edged with steel. Cold. Calculated. Dangerous. His eyes hidden behind cloudy lense, were sharp and Unforgiving as they secretly bored into her, hunting for cracks. "I know you helped Eliana escape. Why?"
Clara’s lips trembled, but before she could form an answer, he rolled his wheelchair closer, leaning into her fear. His jaw tightened, betraying just a flicker of the storm raging beneath his controlled exterior.
"Was it loyalty?" he pressed, his tone dropping lower, darker. "Pity? Or something else?" His stare narrowed, suspicion curling like smoke. "Did you and Eliana already know about Mirabel—before you ever set foot in my house?"
The question lingered like a blade between them. Rafael’s voice was composed, but beneath it was the echo of something rawer—betrayal, desperation, the kind of wound only family secrets could cut open.
Clara trembled, her eyes wide with fear. "Mr. Vexley, please—I swear, I know nothing about Mirabel and Eliana or any connections! Yes, I helped her but it was because... because Mrs Vexley tried to hurt her. She cornered Eliana, threatened her. Said you hurt her brother Victor, that Eliana was going to pay for what you did. I couldn’t stand by—Eliana’s been so kind to me. Please, that’s all I know!"
Rafael’s sarcastic edge sharpened. "Hurt Victor? That snake tried to kill me several times! And you believe Mirabel’s lies? Scrutinize her, James—break her if needed."
But hours of interrogation yielded nothing more. Clara sobbed, confessing only her role in the escape, insisting ignorance of deeper ties. Rafael released her, but doubt gnawed at him. "What the hell is going on, James?" he’d muttered, sinking into his chair. "Eliana... barefoot, running to some mystery man. Clara’s story... it doesn’t add up. Betrayed on every level?"
James nodded solemnly. "We’ll keep digging, sir. But you look like hell. Eat something."
Rafael waved him off, his emotional scars cracking open. "Can’t. Without her... it’s empty. That softness in her touch—was it real? Or just another game?"
The second day brought more torment. He scoured reports, facial recognition on the man from the video yielding frustrating dead ends—Henry Jackson, a name that rang no bells. It was said in the report that the man was from Eliana’s past. The report mentioned: "College friend?" he snarled to himself. "Comfortable with him? Damn it!"
By the third day, Rafael was a wreck—unshaven, eyes bloodshot, his ruthless facade crumbling. He stared at his phone, willing it to ring, his loneliness a suffocating veil. "Eliana... where are you? Did you really betray me?" he whispered to the empty room, voice raw with pain.
Then, it rang. The screen lit: Eliana.
Rafael’s heart slammed against his ribs. He answered with shaking hands, disbelief flooding him. "Eliana? Is that really you?"