
Blind Wife Exposes Deception
Chapter 2
The morning after discovering my pregnancy—and the monstrous game being played at my expense—I made a decision. I would not break. I would not run. I would become the hunter instead of the prey.
I sat in Dr. Carter's dimly lit office, my heart pounding as he explained the experimental treatment. The irony wasn't lost on me—while my so-called husband and his friends thought my blindness made me the perfect victim, it might soon become my greatest advantage.
"Mrs. Sterling," Dr. Carter said, his voice carrying the measured tone of someone accustomed to managing expectations, "I want to be clear that this stem cell therapy is still experimental. There's a sixty percent chance of partial vision restoration, but complete recovery is rare."
I nodded, feeling the weight of the secret growing inside me—both the child and my newfound knowledge. "I understand the risks, Doctor. When can we begin?"
"We can start today if you're ready. The initial injections will be followed by weekly treatments. You may experience headaches, sensitivity to light, or brief flashes of vision. These are all normal responses."
As the cool antiseptic swabbed my temple, I closed my eyes. Not that it mattered—darkness had been my constant companion for three years. The needle pinched as it entered, but I welcomed the pain. It was real, unlike my marriage.
"There," Dr. Carter said finally. "Remember what we discussed—document any changes, no matter how small."
I left his office wearing oversized sunglasses, a precaution he'd suggested against potential light sensitivity. But they served another purpose—a shield behind which I could hide any flickers of sight that might return.
Two weeks into the treatments, it happened. I was alone in the penthouse bathroom when a faint glow appeared at the edges of my darkness—the bathroom light, dim but unmistakable. I pressed my palm against my mouth to stifle a gasp. For three years, I'd lived in complete darkness. Now, there was light—shapeless and blurry, but definitely there.
I didn't tell Connor. I didn't tell anyone.
Instead, I began a secret ritual. Late at night, when Connor was either asleep or—more likely—not even in our bed, I would remove my cane and practice navigating the living room. First by memory, then gradually incorporating what little light perception I had gained.
The outline of the sofa. The gleam of the floor-to-ceiling windows. The shadow of the grand piano in the corner. Each night, the shapes became clearer, more defined.
"You're doing better with your mobility," Connor remarked one evening, his voice carrying that false tenderness that now made my skin crawl. "The physical therapist must be working wonders."
I smiled demurely. "I've been practicing."
If only he knew what else I was practicing.
Three weeks after beginning treatment, I implemented the next phase of my plan. I waited until Connor left for his "business dinner"—which I now understood likely meant time with Madison—before retrieving the tiny audio recorders I'd ordered online. The delivery man had been kind enough to describe them to me in detail when he'd handed me the package.
With careful precision, I placed one in the nightstand drawer of our bedroom, tucking it beneath a stack of silk scarves. The second went under Connor's massive mahogany desk in his study, adhered with a piece of mounting tape. The third required more courage—I stood on a chair in the foyer, feeling along the ceiling until I found the decorative vent, and slipped the recorder inside.
As I stepped down, a shaft of moonlight from the skylight caught my attention—not just as a vague glow, but as a defined beam. I could see the dust motes dancing in it.
My breath caught. I raised my hand, watching as my fingers passed through the light, casting shadows I could actually perceive.
"I see you," I whispered to the empty penthouse, a promise and a threat wrapped in three simple words.
Soon, I would see everything. And they would never see me coming.
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