Current location: Novel nest The Shared Flesh Chapter 10

"The Shared Flesh" Chapter 10

Chapter 10: Counter-Exploitation

The air in the attic tasted of dust, dead wood, and the bitter, chalky chemical residue of high-dose sedatives.

It was a small, low-ceilinged storage space beneath the gabled peak of the estate, accessible only by a steep, hidden spiral staircase behind the master wing. Julian had designed it to be invisible, a clean architectural secret to hide the unsightly clutter of seasonal wardrobe changes. Now, it was Helena’s prison.

Downstairs, the automated locks on the master wing clicked shut, sealing Luna into the primary bedroom. Helena could hear the faint, vibration of Julian’s acoustic sound system through the floorboards. They were playing Chopin.

The inversion of power was absolute.

Two days ago, the legal machinery Helena had tried to summon through Marcus had been violently turned against her.

With a single phone call from Julian to a private psychiatric evaluator—backed by hours of curated nanny-cam footage showing Helena screaming, smashing her laptop with a three-thousand-dollar crystal vase, and tracking her family with unmapped military surveillance—the narrative had been perfectly spun.

The billionaire CEO hadn't been betrayed; she had simply snapped under the weight of her barrenness and a severe, unhinged case of postpartum psychosis.

The heavy oak door at the base of the attic stairs groaned.

A pair of familiar, expensive heels clicked rhythmically up the wooden steps. Helena sat huddled on a dusty leather packing crate, her black silk robe stained, her hair unwashed, looking like a ghost of the woman who had once controlled Wall Street boards.

Luna emerged into the dim light of the attic's singular, circular window. She was wearing Helena’s tailored navy Prada suit.

She had altered the waistline slightly, but the silhouette was unmistakably Helena's. In her hand, she casually held an amber-tinted prescription bottle—Helena’s private, high-potency anti-anxiety medication, prescribed by her private Upper East Side physician.

"It’s time for your evening dosage, Mrs. Vance," Luna said, her voice dropping into that chilling, flawlessly mimicked corporate cadence.

She walked closer, her bare ankle showing beneath the hem of the designer trousers. With a soft clink, she dropped a thick stack of legal documents onto a crate in front of Helena.

The top page bore the seal of the New York State Supreme Court—an emergency medical conservatorship order, granting Julian absolute power of attorney over Helena’s personal estate due to severe mental incompetence.

"You are officially a guest in your own empire, Helena," Luna whispered, a slow, sovereign malice dancing in her amber-hazel eyes. She tilted the prescription bottle, letting the small blue pills rattle against the plastic.

"Julian signed the trust authorization an hour ago. We’ve already restructured the tech acquisition funds into a private holding firm registered in Zurich. I am officially subletting your entire life—your husband, your son, your wardrobe, and your bank trusts."

Helena didn't scream. She didn't lash out. She hit the absolute bottom of despair, her chest hollowed out by the crushing weight of the gaslighting.

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She was being systematically institutionalized inside her own architectural creation, stripped of her sanity, her rights, and her identity by the very domestic creations she had allowed across her threshold.

Beside Luna, Julian appeared at the top of the stairs. He looked pale, his hands shoved deep into his pockets, his eyes darting nervously around the dusty attic. He looked at Helena’s hollow, unwashed face, and for the first time, a faint, phantom dread of Luna’s cruelty flickered across his expression.

The young, fertile goddess he had brought into his bed was moving with a cold, bloodless calculation that mirrored—and perhaps exceeded—the wife he had betrayed.

"Luna," Julian murmured, his voice sounding thin and laced with a sudden, unconfessed anxiety. "Let's just give her the medication and go. The lawyers said the isolation protocol needs to look strictly therapeutic."

"Of course, darling," Luna purred, turning to him with a soft, compliant smile that instantly placated his fragile ego. "Go check on Julian Jr. I'll join you in our bed in a moment."

Julian hesitated, then turned and went back down the stairs, his footsteps heavy with a growing, unspoken regret.

Luna turned back to Helena, her smile instantly dropping into a freezing, predatory sneer. She set the prescription bottle down next to the legal papers.

"Don't worry, Helena," Luna whispered, leaning close enough that the rich, stolen note of No. 22 perfume filled Helena’s lungs. "We’ll take excellent care of your gold. Sleep tight."

She turned on her heel and walked down the stairs. The heavy, reinforced oak door at the bottom swung shut with a thick, pressurized thud, followed by the electronic whine of the biometric deadbolt engaging.

Click. Whirrrrr. Locked.

The attic fell into a pitch-black, suffocating silence.

Helena sat motionless in the dark. For ten minutes, she did not move. The tears dried on her cold cheeks, leaving sticky, tight lines against her skin. But beneath the mask of her broken maternal pride, something ancient and lethal began to click into place.

Luna had underestimated one fatal, foundational detail.

Before Helena Vance was a billionaire CEO, before she was a high-society wife, she was a twenty-two-year-old software engineer.

Her entire early career in Silicon Valley had been built on system architecture, protocol decryption, and network logic. She hadn't just paid for the mansion’s smart-home automation; she had reviewed the core source code for the proprietary residential operating system before it was compiled.

The Vance estate was a digital fortress, yes—but every fortress has a maintenance hatch.

And to a master system architect, the smart-grid network wasn't unassailable. It was just a series of gates waiting for a command override.

The cold, calculating engineer within her finally awakened from its cancer-driven, trauma-induced slumber.

Helena reached into the pocket of her silk robe. Her fingers closed around a small, heavy object she had slipped from her vanity before they dragged her upstairs: a solid silver, professional-grade diamond-dust nail file.

Moving entirely by touch in the absolute dark, Helena dropped to her knees on the cold wooden floorboards.

She crawled toward the corner of the eaves, where the architectural layout dictated the main fiber-optic conduit for the upper wing must pass.

She located a small, flush-mounted metal panel behind a stack of empty luggage—the smart-grid junction box that controlled the automated environmental valves and digital locks for the attic and master suite.

She jammed the sharp, pointed tip of the silver nail file into the seam of the security casing.

With a slow, calculated leverage, she began to pry open the steel faceplate, her breath steady and cold in the dark as the first spark of blue wires hissed into the night.

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