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After Betrayed by My Lover: Unmasking Killian's Lies Novel Cover

After Betrayed by My Lover: Unmasking Killian's Lies

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.
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Chapter 2

I sat motionless on the couch long after Killian's footsteps faded and the door clicked shut. The darkness surrounding me felt different now—not just the absence of sight, but something heavier, more suffocating. The conversation I'd overheard played on loop in my mind, each repetition carving the betrayal deeper into my heart.

*"Marcus bet me fifty bucks she's faking the whole thing."*

*"Testing the little actress has been entertaining."*

My fingers trembled as I reached for the glass of water on the coffee table—the coffee table that had been my anchor point for navigating this small space that was now my entire world. I'd memorized every inch of this apartment out of necessity, counting steps between furniture, learning the texture of each surface. Not as a performance. Not as some sick game to extract sympathy or money from the man I loved.

Loved. The word tasted bitter now.

I heard the door open again, Killian's familiar footsteps crossing the threshold. I quickly composed my face into what I hoped was a neutral expression. My heart hammered against my ribs, but I forced my breathing to remain steady.

"Sorry about that," he called cheerfully. "Had to take a quick call outside. Better reception."

Another lie. How many had there been? How many sweet words and tender touches had been nothing but calculated moves in whatever game he was playing?

"No problem," I replied, hating how normal my voice sounded. "I was just resting."

He moved around the apartment with unusual purpose. I tracked his movements by sound—furniture dragging slightly across the floor, objects being shifted. The subtle changes in air currents told me the space was being rearranged.

"I need to run out for a bit," he announced eventually. "Meeting with some investors. Will you be okay on your own for a few hours?"

"Of course," I said, forcing a smile. "I'll be fine."

His lips pressed against my forehead, and it took everything in me not to flinch away. "That's my brave girl. I'll be back before you know it."

The door opened and closed. His footsteps receded down the hallway. But something felt wrong. The silence that followed was too... attentive. I could feel it—he hadn't left. He was watching, waiting, testing me.

I took a deep breath and stood carefully from the couch. This was it—the "blind girlfriend experiment" in action. I moved forward, counting steps in my head as I always did, but now with the sickening awareness that the landmarks I'd memorized had been deliberately altered.

Three steps forward, where the end table should be. My fingers reached out and met empty air. I frowned, making a show of confusion, while my other senses worked overtime. The subtle change in acoustics told me the table had been moved to the left. I "accidentally" brushed against it, feigning surprise.

"Oh," I murmured to myself, as if discovering the change for the first time.

I continued my careful navigation, deliberately moving with the hesitation of someone truly blind. When I reached what should have been clear passage to the kitchen, my knee collided with something hard—a chair, moved directly into my path.

"Ouch," I gasped, genuinely pained. The collision sent a nearby vase toppling. I heard it fall and shatter against the hardwood floor, the crash echoing in the apartment.

From the doorway came the softest exhalation of frustration—Killian, watching his trap spring but not yielding the results he'd hoped for. The door finally opened and closed for real this time, his footsteps fading down the hallway.

I stood frozen among the broken ceramic, tears streaming down my face. Not from pain, but from the crushing weight of performing blindness for a man testing me like a laboratory rat.

I needed help. I needed proof. I needed a way out.

---

The massage therapy center became my sanctuary. My coworkers guided me through the space, helping me relearn my profession through touch alone. It was exhausting, but the work kept me grounded, gave me purpose beyond being Killian's "brave girl."

"Deeper on the left shoulder, Annie," Marcus Chen instructed as I worked on his knotted muscles. My regular Tuesday appointment with him had become the highlight of my week—not just because he was a generous tipper, but because he never treated me with the cloying pity I'd come to despise.

"You seem tense today," he observed. "More than usual."

I hesitated, my hands pausing briefly on his shoulder before continuing their rhythmic pressure. "Just tired," I replied automatically.

"Hmm." The sound was noncommittal but knowing. After a moment of silence, he added, "You know, I used to be an investigative journalist before I started my consulting business."

"Really?" I tried to keep my voice casual.

"Yes. Specialized in corporate fraud, actually. Got pretty good at recognizing when things didn't add up." He paused meaningfully. "Or when people weren't who they claimed to be."

My hands stilled. The room suddenly felt too small, too quiet.

"Marcus, I—"

"It's okay," he said gently. "You don't have to say anything. But if you ever need someone to... look into things, I still have connections. Resources."

I swallowed hard, my throat tight with unexpected emotion. "Why would you help me?"

"Because I've seen this before," he replied simply. "And no one deserves to be trapped in a lie, especially not their own."

After he dressed and I walked him to the reception area, he pressed something small and cool into my palm. "Voice recorder," he whispered. "Button on the right side activates it. Left side stops. Simple enough to use without seeing. Just in case you need... evidence."

I closed my fingers around the device, a tiny lifeline in my darkness.

"The Gordons," Marcus added, his voice barely audible, "are not just wealthy. They're powerful. Old money, vast connections. Whatever game Killian is playing, it's not just cruel—it's calculated."

For the first time since the accident, I felt something other than fear and betrayal. Something dangerous and unfamiliar.

Hope.

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