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Chapter 2: Accept Fate

Mom's silence filled the room. She stood in the doorway, a shadow against the hallway light.

I already knew the answer. She had known all along. She had known William was going to sell me, and she'd done nothing. Just like all these years.

"How long?" My voice cracked.

"Jasmine, I..." She took a small step forward. "I'm so sorry."

Rage and despair crashed through me at once. My own mother had known.

"Get out."

She didn't move.

"GET OUT!"

She flinched and fled. The door clicked shut behind her.

I collapsed onto my bed. Tears streamed down my face. The pot roast smell made my stomach turn. My face ached where William's fingers had been.

How did it come to this?

Yesterday, I was a world champion gymnast. I had dreams of Olympic gold. My whole life stretched ahead of me, full of possibilities.

Now I was property. A commodity. Something to be traded for William's debts. The unfairness of it burned in my chest like fire.

I wanted to scream. To break things. To run until my legs gave out. To find someone, anyone, who could help me escape this nightmare.

But where would I run? Who would believe me? Who would stand against the Mitchell family?

I was just an eighteen-year-old girl. Trapped. Powerless. William had played this game perfectly. He knew exactly how to control me.

Earlier today, I'd had to lie to everyone. I told them I was leaving for college. An incredible opportunity in New York. Each word felt like poison on my tongue.

"I don't understand, Jasmine." Coach's words from this morning echoed in my head. Her face had been creased with worry. "With your talent, you could dominate the World Championships."

I had rehearsed my lies carefully. "I need stability, Coach. Being a gymnast... it's not forever."

"You could transition into coaching after winning more titles. That would solve the financial problems."

I forced out a bitter laugh. "Could I really watch other girls take my place?" A selfish excuse, but better than the truth.

She studied me for a long moment. Doubt clouded her eyes. "Is that really what this is about?"

I couldn't meet her gaze. "I just need something more permanent than medals."

She didn't believe me. How could she? The lie was too thin, too convenient. But I couldn't tell her the truth. I couldn't tell anyone.

Another knock pulled me from the memory. Mom entered without waiting.

"Have you packed?" Her voice was barely a whisper.

I shook my head.

She crossed the room and hugged me. "I'm sorry, sweetheart. I'm so sorry."

I looked at her closely. Really looked. The woman before me was a ghost of her former self. Years of abuse had hollowed her out.

She had made two fatal mistakes. Trusting love at eighteen – my age now. And marrying William. She should have left after the first hit.

But now it was too late. William had broken something in her. Something that could never heal.

Some days she barely seemed present. Just a shadow drifting through our house. The sight of her made my heart ache. Would that be my future too?

We packed in silence. The Mitchell family's requirements sat on my desk. Coffee stains marked William's review:

Dress code: Elegant and proper attire only.

Purity requirement: Medical examination mandatory.

Appearance: Natural makeup only.

Behavior: Must learn high society etiquette.

Warning: Severe consequences for misconduct.

My future husband was twenty-eight. Louis Mitchell. Ten years older than me.

The thought made me sick. What kind of man buys a teenage girl? What kind of family treats humans as property?

Would he see me as a person? Or just another possession? An ornament for his wealthy lifestyle?

The age gap terrified me. He was a grown man. I had barely finished high school. What would he want from me?

The thought of his touch made my skin crawl. I pushed down the rising panic. I had to stay strong. Had to think clearly.

I needed to survive. To find some way to protect myself in this new world of wealth and power.

Mom helped fold my leotards. My training clothes. All the pieces of my old life.

I tucked away my treasures. The team photo. Thomas's picture. The necklace from my teammates.

The silver charm caught the light. Tears blurred my vision again.

The alarm came too soon.

I dressed carefully. Modest blue sweater. Black pants. Everything proper and controlled.

My room looked strange in the morning light. Competition photos covered the walls. Medals hung in neat rows. The window still held Thomas's fingerprints from our meteor-watching nights.

Mom held my hand during the drive. William sat in dark silence. Thirty minutes to Logan International.

"Behave yourself." His only goodbye carried a clear threat.

Mom hugged me tight. "Call when you can," she whispered.

The terminal stretched before me. My legs felt like lead with each step.

An hour crawled by. Then the plane took off.

Tears rolled silently down my cheeks. The window felt cold against my forehead.

My exhausted mind finally gave in to sleep.

Fear jolted me awake as we landed. My hands wouldn't stop shaking. Reality crashed over me in waves.

This was happening. In a few hours, strangers would own me. The thought made bile rise in my throat.

What would they do with me? What would they expect? Each possibility was worse than the last.

Breathe, I ordered myself. One minute at a time. Just survive each moment.

The arrival hall seemed impossibly large. A man held a sign: "Mitchell."

My new name. My prison sentence. Eight letters that erased everything I was.

No more Jasmine Hamilton. No more athlete. No more champion. No more dreams.

Now I was Jasmine Mitchell. Property of the highest bidder. The thought almost brought me to my knees.

The car had bulletproof glass. We passed endless mansions on Long Island's Gold Coast. Each one screamed of money and power.

Iron gates opened silently. The Mitchell estate sprawled across perfectly manicured grounds.

A woman waited at the entrance. Fifty, maybe. Golden curls. Pale blue contacts. Designer clothes that cost more than everything I owned. Her face showed signs of expensive surgery.

Her smile was practiced perfection.

"Welcome to the Mitchell home, Jasmine." Her voice was cultured and controlled. "I hope your journey wasn't too tiring. I'm Daisy Mitchell, Louis's mother."

I gripped my suitcase until my knuckles turned white. Everything familiar was gone. My home. My dreams. My freedom.

Ahead lay only uncertainty and fear. What kind of life waited in this mansion? What would I become?

Would I break like Mom? Become another hollow shadow? Or could I keep some piece of myself alive in this golden cage?

I forced my spine straight. Met Daisy's gaze.

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