
After My Husband Called Me a Weak Trophy Wife
After My Husband Called Me a Weak Trophy Wife Chapter 1
The basement air was stale, smelling of cold concrete and the sharp, metallic tang of my own sweat. 4:00 AM. The witching hour for the rest of the world; the golden hour for operators. I hung from the exposed steel rafter by three fingers of my left hand, my body a rigid line of kinetic potential. My deltoids burned with a familiar, searing heat—the only honest feeling I’d had in three years.
*One. Two. Three.*
I pulled myself up, chin over the bar, controlling the descent until my muscles screamed. This was the ritual. Down here, in the dark, I was a weapon kept in oil. Upstairs, I was Eleanor Rogers, the Colonel’s delicate wife.
By 6:00 AM, the weapon was concealed. I scrubbed the sweat from my skin in a scalding shower and pulled on a shapeless, floral dress that hid the definition of my traps and the roped muscle of my arms. I applied foundation to mask the scar on my jawline.
When I entered the kitchen, the scent of sizzling bacon and fresh coffee already filled the room. I plated the eggs with surgical precision, placing the fork exactly parallel to the knife.
Caleb walked in a moment later. His uniform was immaculate, the silver eagle of his rank catching the morning light. He didn’t look at me. He looked at his reflection in the toaster as he adjusted his collar.
"Breakfast is ready," I said. My voice was soft, pitched higher than my natural register. A civilian voice.
Caleb grimaced, glancing at the food like it was an insult. "I don't have time for this, El. Some of us have a country to defend."
"You need to eat," I tried, stepping closer.
He sidestepped me, avoiding contact. "Stop fussing. It makes you look desperate. You're always so soft, Eleanor. It’s suffocating."
He grabbed his keys and walked out. The door slammed, rattling the china I’d just set down. I stood at attention in the center of the kitchen, my pulse resting at a steady forty-five beats per minute.
***
By noon, the silence of the house had become a physical weight. I packed a lunch—roast beef, rare, the way he liked it—and drove to the base in Seattle. It was a foolish impulse, a civilian attempt to bridge a gap that required a tactical bridge-layer.
The administration building was a hive of low-level chaos. Phones rang; heavy boots thudded against linoleum. I moved through the lobby, my body remembering old protocols. When the secretary, Mrs. Halloway, turned to yell at a delivery driver, I didn't walk past her; I flowed. I rolled my weight from heel to toe, silencing the cheap flats I wore, slipping into the blind spot of the corridor.
I reached Caleb’s office door. It was cracked open an inch.
I intended to knock. I raised my hand, but the sound stopped me. A low, breathy giggle. Then a moan that had nothing to do with pain.
I froze. My vision tunneled. Through the sliver of space, I saw the edge of Caleb’s mahogany desk. I saw a hand gripping the wood—fingernails painted a regulation-breaking crimson. I knew that hand. Captain Gia Medina. Top of her flight class. Ruthless.
"God, Caleb," Gia’s voice purred, thick with satisfaction. "Are you sure the little housewife won't pop in?"
Caleb’s laugh was dark, a sound I hadn’t heard in years. "Eleanor? She’s probably at home dusting her doll collection. She doesn't have the spine to come here unannounced."
I watched his hand slide over Gia’s shoulder, pulling her closer.
"I don't know how you stand it," Gia murmured.
"I only married her because the brass wanted a connection to the Walker legacy," Caleb said. The words hit me with the force of a caliber round to the chest plate, but I didn't flinch. I stopped breathing, my body locking down trauma response to maintain focus. "She’s a weak, pathetic trophy. A charity case for the Gold Star families. You, Gia... you are the kind of strong woman I actually need. Someone with fire."
He kissed her, hard and hungry.
My hand hovered over the door handle. I could burst in. I could dismantle him in three seconds—break his wrist, dislocate his shoulder, and put Gia through the drywall before either of them drew a breath.
But Eleanor Rogers wouldn't do that. And Eleanor Rogers was dead.
I lowered my hand. I turned and walked away, my steps silent, my face a mask of cold porcelain.
***
Returning home felt like infiltrating a hostile safe house. The floral curtains, the wedding photos on the mantle—it was all camouflage for a life that didn't exist.
I walked to the kitchen island. I twisted the diamond band off my finger. It clattered onto the granite, a hollow, mocking sound.
I didn't pack a bag. I went straight to the attic.
In the far corner, beneath a loose floorboard I’d rigged myself, sat a fireproof lockbox. My fingers danced over the combination lock—a sequence of numbers Caleb would never know. The latch clicked.
Inside lay the remnants of a ghost. A burner phone with a dead battery. A set of dog tags, the metal worn smooth.
I powered on the phone. It took thirty seconds to find the signal. I dialed a number that hadn't been called in three years.
"Secure line," a gruff voice answered on the first ring. General Marcus Thompson.
"This is Thorn," I said. My voice was no longer soft. It was gravel and steel.
Silence stretched on the line, heavy and stunned. "...Eleanor? We thought you were gone for good."
"Reactivate my commission, sir. I'm coming back."
I hung up before he could ask questions.
Downstairs, in the living room fireplace, I piled the stack of *Better Homes & Gardens* and *The Dutiful Wife* magazines Caleb had left for me to read. I struck a match, watching the flame curl the glossy paper, turning the smiling, domestic faces into ash.
The heat flared against my skin, but I didn't step back. I watched it burn.
After My Husband Called Me a Weak Trophy Wife of Contents
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