
Betrayed by Fiancé and Friend
Chapter 2
I needed proof. Tangible evidence that would make Ezra believe me—make anyone believe me.
The small digital camera felt heavy in my palm as I slipped it into my pocket. I'd found it in the back of my closet, still charged from before the accident. My hands trembled slightly as I checked the time: 2:17 PM. Ezra had mentioned a lunch meeting with Catherine to discuss wedding arrangements. A meeting I wasn't invited to.
"Wedding arrangements," I scoffed under my breath. "More like affair arrangements."
I moved silently through the mansion's east wing, my footsteps muffled by the thick carpet. The staff was minimal on Tuesdays—Mrs. Reynolds' doing, to give Ezra and me "privacy" for my recovery. Now I understood why. Privacy for them, not for me.
The sound of Catherine's laugh drifted through the partially open door of Ezra's study. I pressed myself against the wall, heart hammering. Through the crack, I could see them—Ezra standing behind the desk, Catherine perched on the edge, her hand resting casually on his arm.
"We need to be careful," she was saying, her voice low. "If she finds out about the doctor—"
"She won't," Ezra interrupted. "Lucy's still confused about what happened at the warehouse. She doesn't remember everything yet."
I swallowed hard, raising the camera slowly. This was it—concrete proof of their intimacy, their conspiracy. I zoomed in, focusing on their faces, their body language.
The shutter clicked.
Catherine's head snapped up. "What was that?"
I stumbled backward, nearly dropping the camera. "I—I was just—"
Catherine's eyes narrowed as she spotted the camera in my hands. Instead of looking guilty, a slow smile spread across her face.
"Perfect timing," she murmured, exchanging a glance with Ezra.
Before I could react, Catherine lunged forward, grabbing something from the desk—a silver-framed photograph of Ezra's grandparents, a Reynolds family heirloom worth thousands.
"No!" I gasped, reaching for it.
She held it above her head, taunting me. Then, with deliberate slowness, she let it slip from her fingers.
The crash echoed through the room as glass shattered across the hardwood floor.
"What have you done?" Ezra shouted, his face contorting with rage—not at Catherine, but at me.
"I didn't—" I started, but Catherine was already speaking over me.
"She came in so angry," Catherine sobbed, tears springing to her eyes with practiced ease. "Said she knew we were planning something behind her back. When I tried to calm her down, she—she just attacked the picture frame."
"That's not true!" I protested, but Ezra was already moving toward me, his expression cold and clinical.
"Lucy," he said, his voice dangerously calm. "This has to stop."
"Stop? Ezra, she's lying! I was just taking pictures of you two together—"
"Enough." He grabbed my wrist, not roughly but firmly enough to control me. "You're not well. The stress of the wedding, your... condition... it's affecting your judgment."
"I don't have a condition!" I pulled away from him. "I remember everything now!"
Mrs. Reynolds appeared in the doorway, her silk blouse immaculate despite the afternoon heat. "What's happening here?"
"She broke Grandfather's picture frame," Catherine said, her voice trembling perfectly. "And now she's accusing us of... of horrible things."
Mrs. Reynolds' gaze swept over the shattered glass, then settled on me with unmistakable disgust. "Ezra, this is getting worse. Her paranoid delusions—"
"They're not delusions!" I shouted, but my voice sounded hollow even to my own ears.
Ezra sighed heavily. "Lucy, I think it's best if you stay in the house until we can get you help. For your own safety."
"You're confining me?" I whispered, disbelief washing over me.
"It's for your own good," he said, echoing Mrs. Reynolds' constant refrain.
The next day, I reached out to everyone I could think of—old friends from college, distant cousins, even my former art teacher. Each call went the same way.
"Lucy? Oh, Catherine called us last week..."
"She said you've been having episodes..."
"We're so sorry, but we think it's best if you focus on getting well..."
By the fifth call, I stopped trying to explain. They'd already heard Catherine's version—carefully crafted stories about my "dangerous delusions," my "unfortunate mental state," my "need for professional help."
I sat on the edge of my bed, staring at the phone in my hand. The isolation pressed in around me like a physical weight. No one outside these walls believed me. No one would help me.
And inside these walls, I was trapped with people who saw me as nothing more than a patient to be managed, a problem to be contained.
The camera felt heavy in my pocket—useless now, with no one to show it to. No one who would believe what they saw.
I was completely alone.
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