
Betrayed Wife's Payback
Chapter 2
The world exploded in a blinding flash of light. One moment I was suspended in agony, the next I was thrown violently as a deafening boom shattered the warehouse air. Heat seared my exposed skin, and debris rained down around me. The restraints that had held me captive for so long suddenly gave way, and I collapsed onto the concrete floor, my body too broken to catch itself.
Through the haze of pain and smoke, I heard panicked screams. Vanessa's controlled voice had transformed into something shrill and frantic. "Get out! Now!" The clicking of her stilettos receded rapidly, punctuated by Richard's cursing as they fled.
I lay there, tasting blood and ash, certain these were my final moments. The flames licked at the edges of my vision, consuming the instruments of my torture. There was a strange justice in it—that this chamber of horrors would become my funeral pyre.
A shadow moved through the billowing smoke. Not Richard returning. This silhouette was different—broader, more purposeful. Through swollen eyes, I glimpsed Chloe, my once-trusted assistant, cowering against a far wall, her face a mask of terror as the warehouse crumbled around us.
"Isabella!" A voice called out, somehow cutting through the roar of the flames. A voice I hadn't heard in years but would recognize anywhere.
Strong arms slid beneath my battered body, lifting me with surprising gentleness. I couldn't find the strength to resist or respond, my consciousness flickering like the flames surrounding us.
"I've got you," Marcus whispered, his voice tight with controlled fury as he took in the extent of my injuries. "I swear I won't let them hurt you again."
He cradled me against his chest, shielding my nakedness and wounds from the falling debris. Each step he took sent waves of agony through my broken body, but I couldn't even scream anymore. My voice had been used up in that final betrayal, when Richard had looked at me—his wife, the mother of his now-lost child—and chosen to continue my torture.
Marcus moved with urgent precision, navigating through the smoke-filled warehouse. The rotting wooden floors groaned and splintered beneath his feet. I felt the vibration of each footfall, each careful step as he carried me toward safety.
The rush of cool night air hit my skin as we emerged from the inferno. Through half-closed eyes, I saw the sleek outline of an SUV waiting in the shadows, engine running. Marcus placed me on the backseat with surgical care, immediately reaching for what looked like a medical kit.
"You're losing too much blood," he muttered, his fingers working quickly as he wrapped something tight around my thigh. The pressure sent a fresh wave of pain shooting through me, but it was distant now, as though happening to someone else.
I wanted to ask how he'd found me, why he was here, but my lips wouldn't form the words. All I could manage was a broken whimper.
"Stay with me, Izzy," he urged, using the childhood nickname only he had ever called me. His face swam in and out of focus as he worked, his features hardened with determination. "We're going somewhere safe. Somewhere they can never touch you again."
The world blurred as the SUV sped through the night. I drifted in and out of consciousness, aware only of Marcus's steady presence and the promise of safety he represented.
I don't remember arriving at the Hamptons estate. My next clear memory was of bright lights and hushed, urgent voices. A woman's face hovered above mine—stern yet compassionate.
"I'm Dr. Reed," she said calmly. "You're safe now, Isabella. I'm going to help you."
The sting of antiseptic, the sharp pull of sutures closing my wounds, the metallic clink of shrapnel being removed from my flesh—these sensations anchored me to reality as Dr. Reed worked methodically to repair what had been broken.
"The mask," I whispered, my voice a ragged thread of sound. My fingers clawed weakly at my face, still feeling the phantom pressure of the leather that had concealed my identity during the torture. "I can still feel it."
Dr. Reed's hands stilled for a moment. Her eyes met mine, filled with a professional compassion that somehow made the horror more bearable.
"It's gone," she assured me, her voice steady. "But the memory of it may stay with you for some time."
As she returned to her work, I stared up at the unfamiliar ceiling, a single thought crystallizing through the fog of pain and medication. Richard had seen my face. He had known it was me. And he had chosen to let it continue.
That choice would be his undoing. Because while Isabella Morgan the loving wife had died in that warehouse, something else had been born in her place—something forged in betrayal and tempered by unimaginable pain.
Something that would not rest until Richard Blackwood had lost everything, just as I had.
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