
After Betrayed by My Lover: Unmasking Killian's Lies
Chapter 1
The rain hit like tiny fists against my face as I ran through the midnight streets, clutching the paper pharmacy bag to my chest. My shoes splashed through puddles I couldn't see coming, soaking through to my socks, but I didn't slow down. Killian needed me. His text had been desperate—*fever spiking, can't breathe, please hurry*—and the image of him suffering alone in his apartment made my heart clench painfully.
I should have called a cab. I should have done a lot of things differently that night.
The intersection ahead glowed yellow under the streetlights, rain creating halos around each bulb. I heard the engine before I saw the headlights—a roar that grew too loud, too fast. I turned my head just as the world exploded into white light and crushing impact. Then nothing.
***
Darkness. Complete, absolute darkness.
I clawed my way back to consciousness through layers of fog and pain, my head throbbing with each heartbeat. Voices murmured nearby, clinical and detached. The antiseptic smell of hospital invaded my nose, and beneath it, something else—fear, sharp and metallic on my tongue.
"Miss Hayes? Annie, can you hear me?" A woman's voice, gentle but professional, cut through the haze. "I'm Dr. Sarah Chen. You're at Seattle General Hospital. You've been in an accident."
I tried to open my eyes. I *did* open them—I could feel my eyelids lifting, the small muscles working. But the darkness remained, thick and suffocating, pressing against my face like a velvet shroud.
"I can't—" My voice cracked, raw from disuse. Panic clawed up my throat. "I can't see. Why can't I see?"
Dr. Chen's hand found mine, warm and steady. "Annie, you suffered severe head trauma in the accident. The impact caused damage to your optic nerves. Right now, your vision is—"
"Blind." The word fell from my lips like a stone into still water, sending ripples of terror through my entire body. "I'm blind."
"We're running more tests, exploring treatment options—"
But I barely heard her. My free hand flew to my face, fingertips trembling as they traced the bandages wrapped around my head, confirming the nightmare was real. Three days, she said. I'd been unconscious for three days, and woken up to this—this void where the world used to be.
"Annie." A different voice, choked and familiar, cut through my spiraling panic. Killian. His footsteps rushed to my bedside, and then his hands were grasping mine, his grip almost painful in its intensity. "God, Annie, I'm so sorry. This is all my fault. If I hadn't asked you to come—"
"You're here." Relief flooded through me, momentarily pushing back the terror. I squeezed his hands, anchoring myself to something solid in the darkness. "Killian, I'm so scared."
"I know, baby. I know." His voice broke beautifully, trembling with what sounded like genuine anguish. "But I'm not going anywhere. I promise. I've already spoken to the billing department, authorized them to use my family's resources—whatever it takes for your treatment. Every last cent if necessary."
Tears burned behind my useless eyes. Even in my devastation, something warm bloomed in my chest. This was love, wasn't it? This sacrifice, this devotion? Killian was willing to bankrupt himself for me.
"I don't deserve you," I whispered, my thumb tracing circles on the back of his hand—a gesture of gratitude, of trust, of desperate love.
If only I'd known then what that touch would come to mean. If only I'd felt the slight, almost imperceptible smirk that curved his lips in that moment, hidden safely in my darkness.
***
Two weeks later, my small apartment had become both sanctuary and prison. I'd learned to navigate the twelve steps from my bed to the bathroom, the exact angle to turn to reach the kitchen counter. My fingers memorized every surface, every corner, every object that might trip me.
Killian visited daily, his presence filling the space with his cologne and reassuring words. That afternoon, he'd brought groceries, unpacked them while I sat on the couch, and then settled in my bedroom to make phone calls for work. I'd dozed off to the low murmur of his voice, exhausted from another sleepless night of adjusting to my new reality.
But something pulled me back to consciousness—laughter, sharp and cruel, cutting through the walls.
"No, seriously, you should see her." Killian's voice, but stripped of all the tenderness he used with me. "The way she reaches out, all hesitant and pathetic. Marcus bet me fifty bucks she's faking the whole thing."
My breath caught. I sat frozen on the couch, my fingernails digging crescents into my palms.
"I'm telling you, she's committed to the performance." More laughter from his end, casual and light, like he was discussing a mildly amusing movie. "Walking into walls, the whole bit. If she's acting, she deserves an Oscar. Though I have to admit, testing the little actress has been entertaining."
The room tilted. Or maybe it was just me, my entire world fracturing along fault lines I'd never known existed.
"Yeah, yeah, I'll keep you posted on the blind girlfriend experiment. Drinks Friday?" A pause. "Perfect. Later."
I heard him moving in the bedroom, his footsteps approaching. Every muscle in my body locked. When he emerged and crossed to the couch, his hand touched my shoulder with practiced gentleness.
"Hey, sleepyhead," he murmured, his voice honeyed once more. "How are you feeling?"
I couldn't speak. Couldn't move. Could only sit there in my darkness while the man I loved—the man I'd given everything to—waited for my response, his friends' laughter still echoing in my mind like shattered glass.
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