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"The Shared Flesh" Chapter 9

Chapter 9: The Florarium Sin

The rose-gold drive sat in the USB port of Helena’s MacBook like a drop of poison in a pristine well.

The master study was pitch-black, save for the cold, blue glare of the retina display illuminating Helena’s face.

Outside, the Atlantic gale rattled the floor-to-ceiling glass panes, sending sheets of rain slanting against the brutalist concrete exterior. Helena’s hands were frozen flat on the obsidian desk, her breath coming in shallow, rhythmic intervals—the mechanical pacing of a woman trying to keep her heart from exploding.

She clicked the single video file on the drive.

The screen flickered, displaying a high-definition, night-vision feed from the mansion's tropical conservatory—the florarium Julian had built to cultivate rare, exotic orchids in the middle of the coastal salt air.

The camera angle was elevated, hidden behind the automated climate-control vents. It was a blind spot Julian thought he had designed out of the system.

The timestamp on the lower corner read 02:38 AM. Last night. While the scars on Julian's back were still fresh from Helena's desperate, feral claim.

Helena’s vision blurred as the footage came to life.

The conservatory was a dense, suffocating canopy of shadows and broad monstera leaves, illuminated only by the violent flashes of lightning from the storm outside.

In the center of the frame, Julian had Luna pressed hard against the reinforced glass wall. The contrast was a visual violation: the world-renowned architect, a man of absolute structure and elite poise, was completely undone.

His expensive linen shirt was ripped open at the collar, his hands tangled in Luna's hair with a frantic, trembling desperation.

But it was his face that executed the total emotional assassination of Helena Vance.

Julian was weeping. The tears were visible on his dark stubble, his expression a pathetic, enslaved mask of psychological surrender. He buried his face in the crook of Luna’s neck—the neck that still carried the stolen scent of Helena’s vintage No. 22 perfume.

"I can't breathe in this house, Luna," Julian’s recorded voice emerged from the laptop speakers, sounding thin, pathetic, and shattered by marital castration. He was clutching the girl’s waist as if she were a life raft in a concrete sea.

"She's not a woman. She's a cold machine. A high-yield corporate asset. Every time she touches me, I just feel the ghost of her surgeries... I feel the knives, the tumors, the ice. She bought a baby because she couldn't make one, and now she wants to own me, too."

Helena’s world didn't just implode; it turned to ash.

The weak, broken man she had shielded with her multi-million-dollar trust was weaponizing her deepest trauma—the violent theft of her fertility by ovarian cancer—to flatter his twenty-two-year-old mistress.

He was offering up Helena’s reproductive shame as a sacrifice to feed the ego of a working-class parasite. Every word was a knife twisting in the hollow, barren vault of her abdomen.

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Luna stood perfectly still against the glass, accepting his weight. She didn't look like a victim of a billionaire’s husband. She didn't look like a submissive nanny.

As Julian sobbed against her collarbone, his fingers digging into her skin, Luna’s lips curled into a slow, venomous smile. It was the expression of a sovereign predator that had successfully infected the host's nervous system, turning the patriarch into a weapon against the matriarch.

She was stroking his head with a mocking, patronizing rhythm, her fingers running through his curls exactly the way Helena had done hours before.

"I know, Julian," Luna whispered on the track, her voice a low, melodic purr that vibrated through the study.

"The monster doesn't know how to bleed for you. But I do. I gave you your son. I am your home now."

Then came the hook that stopped Helena’s heart entirely.

As Julian continued to mutter his pathetic betrayals against her throat, Luna’s eyes slowly drifted upward. She didn't look at her lover. Her gaze tracked directly toward the hidden camera lens behind the climate vent. It was a statistical impossibility—she shouldn't have known it was there.

Yet, Luna stared straight into the lens. Across the digital divide, through the cold blue pixels of the screen, she looked directly into Helena’s soul.

Her smile widened, flashing a row of neat, white teeth under the lightning strikes, her amber-hazel eyes burning with a dark, explicit challenge: I took your womb. I took your husband. Now watch me take your house.

The video looped, restarting the nightmare.

“She’s a cold machine… a cold machine…”

A violent, physical wave of nausea hit Helena like a sledgehammer to the sternum. The corporate armor, the high-society identity, the elite pride—everything she had built to camouflage her vulnerability was instantly erased by a sickening, feral rage.

She didn't cry. She didn't scream.

With a sudden, manic explosion of movement, Helena reached across the obsidian desk. Her fingers closed around a heavy, three-thousand-dollar Baccarat crystal vase—a piece Julian had gifted her for their fifth anniversary to hold her imported white roses.

She swung it with every ounce of physical strength left in her cancer-ravaged frame.

CRASH.

The heavy crystal smashed directly into the center of the MacBook screen. The display shattered with a violent, electric pop, the high-definition image of Luna’s smiling face fracturing into a thousand jagged lines before going completely black.

The impact sent a cascade of razor-sharp glass shards and heavy crystal fragments exploding into the dark of the study, raining down onto the concrete floor like a shower of frozen teeth, leaving Helena standing alone in the absolute dark, her chest heaving as the storm outside screamed its victory.

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