
Breaking Free from the Trap
Chapter 1
Sleep had become a stranger to me in recent weeks. Perhaps that's why I found myself padding down the hallway at two in the morning, drawn by the thirst that scratched at my throat. The house was tomb-quiet, the kind of silence that makes you aware of your own heartbeat.
I descended the stairs carefully, one hand trailing along the cool banister. The marble felt smooth beneath my bare feet. As I approached the library, a sliver of golden light spilled from the partially open door. Xander must have forgotten to turn off the lamp again. He often worked late, citing business calls with international clients.
But it wasn't the hum of a conference call that stopped me three steps from the doorway.
It was laughter. Soft and intimate. Female.
My hand froze on the banister. Through the gap in the door, I saw them. Liberty's back was to me, her silk robe—the expensive one my brother had given her—catching the lamplight. And Xander. My husband stood before her, closer than I'd seen him stand to anyone in three years. His hands rested on her waist. Not hovering. Not hesitant. Touching.
She leaned into him, rising on her toes to whisper something in his ear. Whatever she said made him smile. Not the polite upturn of lips he offered me at breakfast. A real smile. The kind that reaches the eyes and transforms a face. The kind I'd spent three years trying to earn.
My water glass slipped from my hand.
The crash shattered more than crystal. Both of them turned toward the doorway. I waited for guilt. For shock. For the scrambling panic of people caught in betrayal.
Instead, Xander's expression cooled into something worse than anger. Annoyance. The look you'd give a servant who'd interrupted an important meeting.
Liberty's face showed no embarrassment at all. Her mouth curved into something that might have been a smile if not for the coldness in her eyes.
"Emma." Xander's voice carried the flat tone he used when discussing household expenses. "What are you doing up?"
What was I doing? I stared at the man I'd married, the man who flinched away if my hand accidentally brushed his at dinner, who kept separate rooms because his skin was "too sensitive" for shared spaces. That man now had his hands on my sister-in-law's waist.
"I was thirsty," I heard myself say. The words sounded distant, like someone else was speaking.
Liberty adjusted her robe with deliberate slowness. "How clumsy of you, dropping that glass. You really should be more careful, Emma. You've been so scatterbrained lately."
Scatterbrained. The word she'd been using for months, every time I forgot a conversation or lost track of time. Every time I woke up groggy and confused, unable to remember the evening before.
"I'll clean it up." I bent down, reaching for the shattered pieces.
"Leave it." Xander's command stopped me. "The housekeeping staff will handle it in the morning. Go back to bed."
Not 'Let me help you.' Not 'Are you hurt?' Just an order to remove myself from his sight.
I looked up at him from where I knelt among the broken glass. Three years. Three years of explaining away his distance, his coldness, his refusal to touch me. Three years of believing his doctors' reports about severe contact sensitivity and germophobia. Three years of making excuses to friends who questioned why my husband and I never held hands, never embraced, never existed in the same space as an actual married couple.
And here he stood, hands on another woman. On my brother's widow. In our home. At two in the morning.
"Xander—"
"Go to bed, Emma." His voice dropped to that particular register that allowed no argument. The tone that reminded me I was the one who'd married into his world, not the other way around. That I should be grateful for the Crawford name and the security it provided.
I rose slowly, feeling the sting of a cut on my palm where a glass shard had caught skin. Neither of them noticed the blood. They were already turning back to each other, my presence dismissed as easily as the broken crystal at my feet.
I climbed the stairs to my room, hand pressed against my nightgown to stop the bleeding. Behind me, I heard the library door click shut. Then Liberty's laughter again, muffled but unmistakable.
I sat on the edge of my bed, staring at the cut on my palm. The pain felt distant, overwhelmed by a different kind of hurt. One that started in my chest and spread like poison through my veins.
Something had broken tonight. But it wasn't just a water glass.
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