
Breaking Free from the Trap
Chapter 3
The pre-surgical consultation room smelled of antiseptic and false hope. Dr. Sarah Mitchell spread my blood work across her desk like tarot cards predicting a grim future. Her brow furrowed as she studied the numbers, and something cold settled in my stomach.
"Emma, I need to ask you about these results." Her voice carried the careful neutrality doctors use when they're about to deliver bad news. "Your blood work shows traces of zolpidem. That's a powerful sleep aid."
My heart hammered against my ribs. Finally. Someone else had seen what Xander had been doing to me. "I haven't been taking any sleep medication," I said, leaning forward. "Dr. Mitchell, I think someone has been—"
"Is there a problem?" Xander's voice cut through my confession like a blade. He appeared in the doorway, impeccably dressed as always, his presence filling the small room with that particular authority he wielded so effortlessly.
Dr. Mitchell looked between us, her expression shifting. "Mr. Crawford, I was just discussing Emma's blood work with her. There are some concerning levels of—"
"Ah, yes." Xander moved to stand behind my chair, his hand settling on my shoulder. The touch felt like ice through my blouse. "I should have mentioned Emma's been struggling with anxiety lately. The stress of the surgery, you understand. I've been helping her manage it."
I turned to stare at him. "What?"
His grip tightened, fingers pressing into my shoulder blade. A warning. "The medication Dr. Reeves prescribed has been very helpful. Haven't you been sleeping better, darling?"
The endearment sounded like poison in his mouth. Dr. Mitchell's eyes softened with sympathy as Xander reached into his jacket and produced a prescription bottle. The label was crisp, official, bearing my name and a doctor's signature I'd never seen before.
"Here's the current prescription," he said smoothly. "Dr. Reeves felt it was important to help Emma manage her emotional instability during this difficult time."
Emotional instability. The words hit like a slap. I watched Dr. Mitchell examine the bottle, her concern melting into understanding. "I see. Well, that explains the levels. Though I am surprised the dosage is so high."
"Emma has always been... sensitive," Xander said, his thumb stroking my shoulder in what anyone else would see as a loving gesture. "She tends to catastrophize situations. The kidney donation has her quite overwrought."
I wanted to scream. To tear the forged prescription from Dr. Mitchell's hands and tell her about the notebook, the dates, the systematic drugging. But Xander's fingers dug deeper into my shoulder, and I remembered how easily he'd dismissed my concerns before. How quickly people believed his version of events over mine.
"I understand," Dr. Mitchell said gently. "Emma, anxiety before surgery is completely normal. But we'll need to adjust your medication schedule to ensure it doesn't interfere with the anesthesia."
I nodded numbly, watching my last chance for validation slip away. Xander had prepared for this moment, had a story ready to explain away every piece of evidence. Of course he did. He'd been planning this for months.
After the appointment, Xander walked me to the car in silence. Only when we were enclosed in the leather interior did he speak.
"You seem upset, Emma."
I stared out the window at the hospital parking lot, watching families come and go. Normal families. Honest families. "You drugged me."
"I helped you sleep." His voice remained perfectly calm. "You've been so agitated lately. So paranoid. Dr. Reeves agreed that medication would help."
"Dr. Reeves doesn't exist."
"Of course he does. You met him last month. Don't you remember?" He started the engine, the purr of the expensive car drowning out my racing thoughts. "Your memory has been quite unreliable lately. Another symptom of your condition."
My condition. As if loving him, trusting him, believing in our marriage was a disease that needed treatment.
That evening, I found Liberty in the garden, her phone pressed to her ear. She paced among the roses my brother had planted, her voice low but carrying on the still air.
"...keeping Emma compliant until after the surgery," she was saying. "Once we have the kidney, it won't matter what she remembers."
I stepped closer, my bare feet silent on the grass. Liberty's back was to me, her free hand gesturing as she spoke.
"The doctor bought Xander's story completely. Emma looked like she was having a breakdown right there in the office. Perfect."
My blood turned to ice. They were working together. Planning together. Using my body like a commodity to be harvested.
"Liberty." I stepped into the light spilling from the house.
She spun around, phone still pressed to her ear. For just a moment, her mask slipped, and I saw something cold and calculating in her eyes. Then the grieving mother returned.
"I have to go," she said into the phone, ending the call. "Emma! You startled me."
"Who were you talking to?"
Her laugh sounded forced. "My sister. She's been so worried about Tommy. We were discussing that medical drama she's obsessed with. You know how she gets wrapped up in those shows."
"You said something about keeping me compliant."
Liberty's eyes widened with what looked like genuine confusion. "Compliant? Emma, what are you talking about?"
"I heard you. You said once you have the kidney—"
"Oh, honey." Liberty's voice dripped with concern as she moved closer. "You're losing touch with reality, aren't you? The stress of the surgery... Xander mentioned you've been having episodes."
Episodes. Another word to make me doubt my own senses.
"I know what I heard."
"You heard my sister and me discussing a television show about organ donation. That's all." Liberty reached out as if to touch my arm, then seemed to think better of it. "Emma, you're scaring me. Maybe you should talk to Xander about adjusting your medication."
There it was again. The suggestion that I was unstable, unreliable, in need of chemical management. I looked at this woman who had taken everything from me—my husband's affection, my place in my own home, and now my kidney—and felt something inside me crystallize into steel.
"You're right," I said quietly. "I should talk to Xander."
Liberty smiled, satisfied that she'd successfully gaslit me once again. "Good. We all just want what's best for you, Emma. And for Tommy, of course."
I walked back to the house, leaving her among the roses. But I wasn't going to talk to Xander about medication. I was going to start planning my escape.
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