
After My Husband Betrayed Me, I Sought Justice
Chapter 1
The mountain air felt different in my lungs as I stumbled down the winding path toward civilization. One year. Three hundred and sixty-five days of captivity, of fighting to survive, of dreaming about this moment. My legs trembled beneath me, weak from malnutrition but propelled by desperation. The Coleman estate loomed in the distance, its familiar silhouette both a promise and a prayer.
I'd imagined this reunion a thousand times in my darkest moments. Samuel's strong arms wrapping around me. The warmth of home. Safety.
"Almost there," I whispered to myself, my voice hoarse from disuse. "Almost home."
The iron gates of the Coleman estate stood open, as if waiting for me. I limped through them, my bare feet bleeding from the journey, but I couldn't stop. Not now. Not when I was so close.
The mansion doors flew open before I reached them. Figures rushed out—but not Samuel. Not my husband.
"Look who's finally decided to join us," came a familiar voice that sent ice through my veins.
Anika Hunt stood at the top of the steps, wearing my emerald silk dress—the one Samuel had gifted me on our fifth anniversary. Around her neck gleamed my mother's pearl necklace, the one I'd promised to pass down to our son.
"Tiffany." She descended the steps with practiced grace, her smile sharp as a blade. "How... resilient of you to find your way back."
Before I could respond, Samuel appeared behind her. My husband. The man I'd dreamed of every night in that mountain hellhole. His face was thinner than I remembered, his eyes shadowed—but when he saw me, there was no rush forward, no tearful embrace.
"Tiffany," he said, his voice distant. "You've come back."
Not "Welcome home." Not "I've missed you." Just a statement of fact.
"Samuel," I whispered, reaching for him. "I'm here. I'm finally here."
He glanced at Anika before taking my hand, his touch brief and cool. "Anika has been helping me while you were gone. She's been... indispensable."
The way his eyes lingered on her told me everything I needed to know. In my absence, something had shifted. Something had broken.
"Where's Jackson?" I asked, searching for the one thing that might still be mine.
"Inside," Anika answered before Samuel could speak. "But before we reunite you with your son, we need to address your... condition."
"My condition?"
"Your trauma," she said, her voice dripping with false sympathy. "I'm a therapist, Tiffany. I specialize in cases like yours. And right now, you need therapeutic intervention."
I looked to Samuel, expecting him to defend me, to question this stranger wearing my clothes, claiming expertise she'd never possessed before. Instead, he nodded.
"Anika has helped me understand what you'll need to recover," he said. "To rebuild your strength and confidence."
That afternoon, Anika led me to the backyard where she'd arranged what looked like a makeshift fire pit. Red-hot coals glowed dangerously in the center of a pattern laid out on the lawn.
"What is this?" I asked, my heart beginning to race.
"A therapeutic exercise," Anika explained, her eyes gleaming with something that wasn't compassion. "To help you confront your fear and reclaim your power."
Samuel stood nearby, watching with an expression I couldn't read. "It's for your own good, Tiffany," he said quietly.
"For my own good," I repeated numbly.
"Take off your shoes," Anika instructed. "Walk the path. Show yourself—show Samuel—how strong you really are."
I looked at the coals, then at my husband. The man who had once carried me across thresholds, who had promised to protect me from all harm, was now encouraging me to burn my feet for the sake of "therapy."
Slowly, I removed my shoes.
That evening, we sat at the dining table—the three of us, like some twisted version of a family. Anika served a meal she'd prepared in my kitchen, using my recipes.
"Where's Jackson?" I asked again, unable to hide my desperation.
"Having his session," Anika replied casually, sipping wine from my grandmother's crystal. "He's been making such progress with the electroshock therapy."
My fork clattered against my plate. "What did you say?"
"Jackson has been struggling with your absence," Samuel explained, not meeting my eyes. "Anika has been helping him process his trauma."
"Electroshock therapy?" I whispered, horror crawling up my spine. "On a child? On my child?"
"It's perfectly safe when administered properly," Anika said, her professional mask slipping just enough to reveal satisfaction at my distress. "I have the credentials to back that up."
I turned to Samuel, pleading. "You can't possibly believe this is okay. Let me see her credentials. Let me see what she's doing to our son!"
But Samuel's expression had already hardened, his decision made long before I'd walked through those doors.
"Tiffany," he said coldly, "Anika knows what she's doing. And if you can't accept that, perhaps you're not as ready to be a mother again as you think."
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