Chapter One: The Escape

1003 Words
It was her wedding day. The Torres house was filled with noise and frenzy. The smell of stew drifted from the kitchen, neighbors spilled into the compound, and borrowed plastic chairs clattered against one another as boys arranged them under the tent. From the outside, it looked like a celebration. From the inside, it felt like a prison. Isabella stood in her tiny bedroom, pressed against the wall as if the plaster itself might open and swallow her whole. Her chest rose and fell with frantic breaths, and the wedding gown which was a stiff lace and heavy satin felt more like a shroud than a dress. Her fingers itched to tear it off, but there was no time. Her father’s voice thundered from the living room. “Where is she? Bring her out! The priest has been waiting for hours!” Her mother’s sharp reply followed. “Isabella! Enough foolishness. Do you know what this marriage means for us?” Yes, she knew. It meant money. It meant her father’s debts would be wiped clean, her brothers would return to school, her mother would finally have respect in the neighborhood. It meant her freedom, her dreams, her life traded like goods in the market. For a man she had never seen. Sebastián Álvarez. His name carried weight like a curse. The CEO of Velasco Holdings, rumored to be older, proud, untouchable. Some said he had ruined men with a flick of his wrist. Others said he was cold as steel, incapable of kindness. To Isabella, it didn’t matter what the rumors said. He could be kind or cruel, young or old. The truth was the same: he wasn’t her choice. The doorknob rattled, her mother’s hand beating against the wood. “Isabella, open this door!” Her heart slammed against her ribs. If she didn’t move now, they would drag her out and force her to the altar like a goat tied for sacrifice. Her decision was made. She grabbed her small backpack, already hidden beneath the bed stuffed with nothing more than a water bottle, an old sweater, and a little money she had managed to save. With shaking hands, she shoved the window open. The wooden frame groaned in protest. The lace veil snagged on a nail and ripped, but she didn’t care. The cold morning air slapped her face as she pushed herself through. Her bare feet hit the earth. “Isabella!” her mother screamed as the door burst open behind her. But Isabella was already running. The gown tangled around her legs, her veil caught on a branch, her knees burned as she stumbled over stones. Still, she didn’t stop. She ran past children pointing and laughing, past neighbors gasping at the sight of a bride fleeing through the street. The sound of voices rose behind her—shouts, calls, curses. “Catch her!” “Don’t let her go!” But Isabella’s fear was stronger than their reach. She tore through alleys, her lungs aching, her throat raw, her vision blurred with tears. She didn’t know how long she ran, only that her legs screamed in protest and her body felt close to collapsing. She turned onto a wide avenue, and cars roared past, horns blaring as she darted across recklessly. Then she saw a sleek black car, parked at the corner with the engine humming softly. Without thinking, she yanked the back door open and flung herself inside. The smell of leather and cologne filled her nose. She slammed the door shut behind her, heart hammering. “Please!” she gasped, clutching the seat. “Drive. Just—just drive!” The man in the front seat turned his head. For a moment, Isabella froze. He wasn’t what she expected. Not scruffy, not ordinary. His suit was immaculate despite the loosened tie, his watch gleamed, and his eyes—dark, unreadable—stared at her in stunned silence. Too polished, too perfect to be just a driver. But desperation drowned her suspicion. “I’ll pay you,” she blurted, her voice trembling. “Any amount. Just take me far away from here. Please.” He didn’t answer immediately. His gaze swept over her—her wild eyes, the torn veil, the trembling hands clutching the gown. Something flickered in his expression, but it was gone before she could name it. "I..." he started to speak but stopped almost immediately. At last, without a word, he shifted the gear and pulled the car away from the curb. Relief flooded her body, and she sagged against the seat. The dress pooled around her like stormclouds, heavy and suffocating. For the first time that morning, she felt a breath of freedom. But his voice cut through the silence. Low, calm, steady. “Who are you running from?” Her laugh came out bitter, and broken. “My family. They want to marry me off. Today—right now—I was supposed to be Sebastián Álvarez’s bride.” She spat the name like poison. “They say he’s arrogant, merciless. I’d rather die than marry him.” His fingers tightened slightly around the wheel. Still, he said nothing. Isabella turned her face toward the window, tears streaking her cheeks. “Men like him think they can buy everything. Wives. Loyalty. Even love. But no money in this world can buy me.” The car was silent except for the hum of the engine. She wiped her eyes and glanced at him again, uneasy with his quietness. “What’s your name?” she asked finally. His jaw worked as if he wrestled with the answer. A truth hovered on his lips, heavy and dangerous. But instead, he said softly, “Gabriel.” She exhaled a shaky sigh, the tension in her shoulders loosening. “Thank you, Gabriel. Thank you for saving me.” Her words hung between them like fragile glass. He didn’t smile. His eyes stayed fixed on the road, his expression unreadable, but inside him, something shifted.
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