Love Too Late
In the past, I was Raymond Wright’s wife. Or rather, a prisoner kept in his gilded cage.
I was an internationally renowned jewelry designer. Under the spotlight, I had the most dazzling presence.
Raymond was the most influential business elite on Floor Street, and he had an extreme desire for control.
He claimed to love me, but he never truly loved me for who I was.
He was determined to shape me into the “perfect Mrs. Wright” that existed in his imagination.
He disliked me having my own social circle and hated it when I appeared in public.
I once naively believed that if I were obedient enough, he would eventually recognize my sacrifices.
The turning point came at a banquet. Someone there publicly mocked me as “nothing but a canary kept by Mr. Wright.”
I could bear it no longer and retorted. Raymond rushed over and coldly scolded me. He said, “Behave yourself. Don’t embarrass me.”
At that moment, the surrounding snickers and the disgust in his gaze forced the truth upon me.
Ultimately, I fell down the stairs in an “accident” orchestrated by my stepsister.
When I opened my eyes again, I was greeted by a warm-toned pendant lamp in the apartment I lived in before I married Raymond.
On the desk calendar, a date was circled in red—there were only five days left until my wedding to Raymond.
I had returned to the past.
This time, I did not want to get involved with Raymond anymore.