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Betrayed in Love's Shadow Novel Cover

Betrayed in Love's Shadow

The cold concrete pressed against my cheek, rough and unforgiving. I could taste copper on my tongue, feel the warm trickle of blood from my split lip. Above me, a phone camera glowed like a malevolent eye, broadcasting my humiliation to thousands of strangers. "Please," I whispered, but the word came out broken. One of the men—I couldn't see his face clearly through my swelling eye—laughed. "Your husband's watching," he said, angling the phone toward me. "Want to say hi?" Three years. Three years of marriage, and this was my anniversary gift. The livestream chat scrolled past in a blur of cruel comments. I caught fragments: *She deserves this.* *What did she expect after crippling him?* *Harry Reed's wife getting what's coming to her.* Somewhere behind that screen, Harry was watching.
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Chapter 2

I awoke to the bitter taste of coffee on my lips. Harry sat beside the bed, his face cast in shadow, a half-empty mug in his hand.

"Drink," he said, pressing the rim against my bruised mouth. "You'll need it."

I was still disoriented from last night's beating, my body a constellation of pain points. Something about the coffee tasted wrong—metallic, almost—but I swallowed obediently. Harry had never brought me coffee before. Not since before the accident.

"Harry?" My voice sounded small, hopeful despite everything. "What's happening?"

He didn't answer, just watched me with those cold eyes as the room began to swim. My limbs grew heavy, unresponsive. I tried to lift my hand but couldn't. Panic bloomed in my chest as I realized what was happening.

"You drugged me," I whispered, the words slurring at the edges.

"Yes." No emotion. No hesitation. Just calm acknowledgment as he produced leather restraints from beside the bed and secured my wrists and ankles.

My mind screamed to run, but my body wouldn't obey. The drug pulled me under, not completely unconscious but trapped in a hazy twilight where time stretched and contracted like taffy.

When full awareness returned, I was spread-eagled on our bed. Harry sat beside me, a small metal case open on his lap. The glint of surgical steel caught the morning light.

"Do you know what this is?" he asked, holding up a scalpel.

Terror seized my throat. "Harry, please—"

"Three years ago, you took my legs." His voice was conversational, almost gentle. "I've had a lot of time to think about proper restitution."

I pulled against the restraints, raw panic giving me strength I didn't know I had. "I'm sorry, I'm so sorry—"

"Sorry doesn't give me back my legs." He positioned the scalpel above my right wrist, pressing just enough to dimple the skin. "But this... this makes us even."

The first cut was precise, surgical. The pain was beyond anything I'd ever felt—white-hot lightning shooting up my arm. My scream tore through the house, bouncing off walls that had witnessed three years of quieter suffering.

"The flexor tendons first," Harry narrated clinically, as though teaching an anatomy class. "Then the extensors."

I begged. I pleaded. I screamed until my voice gave out. But Harry worked methodically, severing the delicate tendons in both my hands with the precision of someone who had studied exactly how to cause maximum damage.

"Now we're even," he said when he finished, wiping the bloody scalpel on the bedsheets. "You destroyed my mobility. I've destroyed yours."

He left me there, blood pooling beneath my mangled hands, and called an ambulance.

The hospital lights were too bright, the antiseptic smell turning my stomach. Dr. Marcus Chen's face told me everything before he spoke a word. I'd seen that expression before—the careful neutrality that couldn't quite mask the horror underneath.

"The damage is... extensive," he said, looking at the X-rays rather than at me. "The tendons have been completely severed, with significant tissue loss. I'm so sorry, Nyla, but..."

"But what?" My voice was raw from screaming.

"We can't repair this. Not fully. You'll need multiple surgeries just to regain basic function."

Harry sat in his wheelchair nearby, watching with cold satisfaction. "Karma," he said, loud enough for Dr. Chen to hear. "This is what you deserve for what you did to me."

I broke then, truly broke, sobbing until I couldn't breathe. Dr. Chen shot Harry a look of disgust before sedating me.

Two weeks later, I stood in our kitchen, bandaged hands throbbing with each heartbeat. Using only my wrists and forearms, I struggled to prepare Harry's birthday dinner—his favorite rosemary lamb and roasted potatoes. Each movement was agony, each task taking five times longer than it should. But I persisted, driven by some desperate hope that this gesture might pierce through his hatred.

I heard his wheelchair before I saw him, the soft whir of the motor announcing his arrival. I turned, attempting a smile despite my split lip that hadn't fully healed.

"Happy birthday," I whispered. "I made your favorite."

Harry looked at the table I'd painstakingly set, at the food I'd prepared through tears of pain. Something flickered across his face—surprise, perhaps even a moment of softness.

Then Sophia appeared behind him, her hand possessively on his shoulder.

"What's this?" she asked, her voice dripping with disdain.

The softness vanished from Harry's expression. With one violent sweep of his arm, he sent everything crashing to the floor—plates shattering, food splattered across the tiles I'd scrubbed on my knees that morning.

"Sophia," he said, not looking at me, not looking at the destruction, "let's order takeout."

I stood amid the ruins of my offering, my bandaged hands hanging uselessly at my sides, and understood with perfect clarity that there was nothing left of the man I had once loved enough to sacrifice everything for.

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