
After My Fiancé Chose the Villain
Chapter 3
The morning sun streamed through the hospital blinds, casting harsh lines across my face as I stared at the blank piece of paper Braxton had placed on my bedside table. My hands trembled—not from weakness, but from rage so pure it felt like electricity coursing through my veins.
"It's simple, Mara," Braxton said, his voice carrying that patronizing tone I was beginning to despise. "Just write that you forgive Claire for what happened. That you understand it was all a terrible misunderstanding."
I looked up at him, this man who had once promised to love and protect me, now standing at the foot of my hospital bed like a stranger delivering an ultimatum. His expensive suit was perfectly pressed, his hair styled with the kind of care he used to reserve for me. But his eyes—those eyes that had once looked at me with such tenderness—were cold, calculating.
"You want me to publicly forgive the woman who orchestrated my torture?" My voice came out steady despite the storm raging inside my chest.
"She's suffering, Mara." Braxton's jaw tightened. "The media is destroying her reputation. She can barely leave her apartment without photographers hounding her. This could help restore some dignity to her life."
Dignity. The word tasted bitter in my mouth. "What about my dignity? What about what she put me through?"
"That's exactly why your forgiveness would mean so much." He leaned forward, his hands gripping the bed rail. "Think about it—you'd be the bigger person here. The victim who chose grace over revenge."
I studied his face, searching for any trace of the man who had held my hand during scary movies, who had proposed to me on the beach at sunset, who had cried when he found me broken and bleeding. But all I saw was a stranger wearing my fiancé's face.
"No," I said quietly.
The word hung in the air between us like a blade.
"No?" Braxton's eyebrows shot up in genuine surprise, as if he'd never considered the possibility that I might refuse. "Mara, be reasonable. Claire made a mistake—"
"She hired men to kidnap us. She specifically told them to hurt me." My voice grew stronger with each word. "She wanted me to suffer, Braxton. And I did. For a hundred hours, I suffered because of her."
"You're being vindictive," he snapped, his mask of patience finally slipping. "This isn't like you. You used to be compassionate, forgiving. Now you're just... bitter."
Bitter. The accusation hit me like a physical blow. "I'm bitter? I spent four days being tortured to protect you, and you're calling me bitter because I won't write a love letter to my torturer?"
"It's not a love letter, it's a public statement of forgiveness. There's a difference." Braxton's voice rose, drawing concerned glances from the nurses in the hallway. "Claire needs this, Mara. She needs to know that you don't hate her."
"But I do hate her," I said, the words escaping before I could stop them. "And apparently, I'm starting to hate you too."
The silence that followed was deafening. Braxton stared at me as if I'd slapped him, his face cycling through shock, hurt, and finally, anger.
"Fine," he said, his voice ice-cold. "If that's how you want to be. If you can't move forward, can't be the woman I thought you were, then maybe we both need to reconsider what we're doing here."
He turned to leave, then paused at the door. "Claire was right about you, you know. She said you'd never be able to let this go, that you'd use it to control me. I defended you, told her she was wrong. But maybe she sees you more clearly than I do."
The door clicked shut behind him, leaving me alone with the blank paper and the crushing realization that the man I'd loved enough to endure hell for was already lost to me.
I reached for the paper with shaking hands, but instead of writing Claire's forgiveness letter, I tore it in half. Then I tore those pieces in half again, and again, until my bedside table was covered in white confetti—the remnants of my refusal to betray myself for a man who had already betrayed me.
The machines monitoring my heart rate began beeping faster, but this time, I didn't care who noticed. Let them see my pain, my anger, my absolute refusal to write one word of absolution for the woman who had destroyed my life and stolen my fiancé's soul.
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