
After My Husband Made Me the Villain in His Game
Chapter 2
The silence of the house was usually a comfort, a soft blanket woven from twenty years of shared memories. Now, it felt like holding my breath underwater. When we returned from the disastrous anniversary dinner, the front door was already unlocked.
Veda stood in the foyer. She wasn't wearing the sharp, corporate attire from the boardroom. She wore a slip dress that clung to her like a second skin, shimmering under the chandelier light. She held a stopwatch.
"You're late," she said, not to me, but to Theodore. "The window for the Trust Fall event is closing. We need the elevation of the master suite balcony."
I stepped in front of her, the alcohol from dinner souring in my stomach. "Get out. This is my home. That is my bedroom."
Theodore pushed past me, shedding his suit jacket as if shedding his sanity. His eyes were bright, feverish. "Mallory, don't start. It's a timed mission. If I catch her, I unlock the next tier of intimacy. It’s symbolic."
"Symbolic?" I choked out a laugh that sounded more like a sob. "She’s a con artist, Theo! She’s playing you!"
He didn't hear me. He was already ascending the grand staircase, Veda trailing behind him like a poisonous shadow. She cast a glance over her shoulder—a smirk that didn't reach her dead, shark-like eyes.
I ran. I scrambled up the steps, my heels catching on the plush runner, desperate to put my body between my husband and the destruction of our sacred space. I reached the landing just as Theodore reached for the handle of our bedroom door.
"No!" I screamed, grabbing his arm. His muscles were tense, vibrating with adrenaline. "Theodore, look at me! I am your wife. You don't let strangers into our bed. You don't catch other women!"
"You're an NPC right now, Mallory," Veda droned from two steps down. "Non-Player Character. Obstacles reduce the score."
Theodore looked at me. For a second, I thought I saw a flicker of the man who had once held my hair back while I was sick, the man who had wept at our wedding. But then Veda tapped the glass face of her stopwatch.
"Ten seconds, Theo."
The flicker died. His expression hardened into something unrecognizable—impatience, cold and jagged.
"Move," he growled.
I planted my feet. "I am not moving."
He didn't hesitate. He didn't gently move me aside. He shoved me.
It was a hard, decisive thrust against my chest, the kind of force used to barge through a stuck door. My heels slipped on the polished oak of the landing. I grasped for the banister, but my fingers found only air.
Gravity took over. The world tilted violently.
I didn't scream. I just watched Theodore's face recede as I fell backward. He wasn't reaching for me. He was turning the handle to the bedroom.
The impact was a cacophony of sounds—the dull thud of my skull against the wall, the sickening crack of bone in my left arm, the tumble of my body down the stairs I had walked up a thousand times. I landed in a heap at the bottom, the foyer ceiling spinning in lazy, nauseating circles.
Through the ringing in my ears, I heard the bedroom door click shut upstairs.
***
The hospital smelled of antiseptic and neglect. My left arm was a heavy plaster weight across my chest, and a dull throb pulsed behind my eyes, consistent with the rhythm of the heart monitor.
"You have a hairline fracture in the ulna and a grade-two concussion," a nurse had told me hours ago. Or was it days? Time felt viscous.
The door opened. Theodore walked in. He looked immaculate, fresh from a shower, while I lay there broken in a gown that tied in the back. He didn't sit in the chair next to the bed. He stood at the foot, checking his watch.
"You're awake," he stated. No question. No relief.
"You pushed me," I whispered. My throat felt like it was full of glass.
"I moved you," he corrected, his voice tight with annoyance. "You were hysterical. You were blocking the path. Because of your little scene, Veda's mood meter dropped. We had to spend three hours recalibrating the game state."
Tears pricked my eyes, hot and humiliating. "I could have broken my neck, Theodore. I'm your wife."
"You're dramatic," he countered, pulling his phone from his pocket as it buzzed. His face softened instantly as he looked at the screen—a look of devotion that made my stomach turn. "She needs me. The server is resetting."
"Don't go," I begged, hating myself for it. "Please. Just stay until the doctor comes back."
"I can't. This is a limited-time event." He turned his back on me. "Rest, Mallory. Stop being so fragile."
The door clicked shut, echoing the sound from the top of the stairs.
I drifted into a fitful sleep, haunted by dreams of falling. When I woke, the room was dim, the harsh overhead lights replaced by the soft glow of the monitors. But the scent of the room had changed. The antiseptic smell was masked by something fresh, earthy—like rain on dry soil.
I turned my head painfully.
On the bedside table, where Theodore had left nothing but his contempt, stood a crystal vase filled with white camellias. My favorites. They weren't the gaudy red roses Veda had butchered my lawn with. These were delicate, quiet, and sincere.
There was no card.
I blinked, trying to clear the concussion fog. A shadow moved near the door—a tall, broad-shouldered silhouette lingering in the hallway light. The figure paused, just for a second, watching me. It wasn't Theodore. The posture was protective, not possessive.
"Beau?" I breathed, the name surfacing from a memory two years old.
The shadow didn't answer. It simply nodded, a barely perceptible dip of the head, before vanishing into the corridor, leaving me alone with the flowers and the terrifying realization that a stranger cared more about my life than my husband did.
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