
Broken Canvas, Unbroken Spirit Rises
I had just sold my entire art collection, a massive sum that was supposed to be our new beginning. I couldn't wait to see the look on my husband Axel's face.
But when he walked through the door, he didn't see a successful artist. He saw a cheater.
"Who did you sleep with for that money?" he spat, his words fueled by his mother's poison.
His rage exploded. He tore my studio apart, shredding my life's work. Then he turned on me, kicking my pregnant belly until I miscarried our child on the floor of my ruined dreams.
As I lay there, bleeding and broken, a call came from the fertility clinic. The paternity test was positive. The baby he had just killed was his own.
He fell to his knees, sobbing and begging for forgiveness. But the man I married was gone. He had destroyed my art, my mother, and my child.
Now, it was my turn to destroy him.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 2
Keyla Castillo POV:
My scream of "You monster!" still echoed in the ruined studio, but it wasn't enough. It wasn't enough to stop the wave of rage that consumed Axel. He turned from my mother's still form, his eyes locking onto me. The flicker of dawning horror vanished, replaced by a cold, hard fury. He lunged.
My world tilted. His hand clamped around my arm, twisting, pulling. I lost my footing, stumbling backward over the debris of my shattered dreams. An easel, its twisted metal frame now a weapon, caught my hip with a sickening thud. Pain exploded through me, a sharp, searing agony that stole my breath.
I crashed to the floor, my head narrowly missing a splintered wooden palette. Paint tubes, brushes, and ceramics scattered around me, a colorful, chaotic testament to the violence. The impact rattled my teeth, and a high-pitched ringing filled my ears, momentarily drowning out all other sounds. I lay there, disoriented, staring up at Axel through tear-filled eyes, trying to comprehend the monster he had become. This wasn' t the man I married. This was a stranger, fueled by a venom I couldn't understand.
"What... what is happening?" My mother, Dalia, her voice weak and laced with fear, appeared in the doorway again. She must have regained consciousness, but her face was pale, a thin trickle of blood still running down her temple. She took in the scene, her eyes widening in horror, and then she rushed towards me, her own pain forgotten in her desperate need to help.
"Keyla! Oh, my God!" she cried, kneeling beside me, her trembling hands reaching to help me sit up. My body screamed in protest, every muscle aching.
Axel watched us, his chest heaving, his face contorted. "Get away from her, Dalia!" he snarled, his voice raw. "She's a liar! A cheat!"
"Axel, please, stop this!" my mother pleaded, shielding me with her body. "There has to be a misunderstanding! You're hurting her!"
But he wasn't listening. His eyes were bloodshot, his jaw clenched so tight I thought his teeth might shatter. "Misunderstanding?" he scoffed, a sneer twisting his lips. "There's no misunderstanding when my wife is screwing around behind my back and trying to get rich off some other man's money!"
He grabbed a heavy ceramic vase from a nearby shelf and hurled it past my mother's head. It smashed against the wall behind us, sending shards flying. My mother gasped, pulling me closer.
"She's a whore! A gold-digger!" he railed, his words piercing me like daggers. "And this baby... this baby isn't even mine!"
The words hit me like another physical blow, stealing what little air I had left. The baby. He knew. But how? My mind raced, trying to connect the dots between his destruction, his accusations, and this. The paternity test. It had to be the paternity test.
"Axel, you're wrong!" I choked out, pushing myself up despite the pain. "There's no other man! I'm not a cheat! And this baby is yours!"
He laughed, a deranged, humorless sound. "Oh, really? Then what's this, Keyla?" He pulled his phone from his pocket, his finger swiping furiously. He thrust it towards my face, the screen displaying a text message conversation.
My eyes scanned the screen, trying to make sense of the jumble of words. It was a chat, between Jule Andrews and... Kelsey? Jule's wife, Kelsey? My heart hammered. The messages were accusatory, implying an affair. And then, there was a picture. A grainy, poorly lit photo of a woman's slender hand, adorned with a distinctive ring-a ring I recognized as my own-holding a small, intricately carved wooden bird. The bird. The one I had painstakingly carved for Axel years ago, a representation of our enduring love, placed lovingly on his bedside table.
My mind reeled. The ring, the bird... they were mine. But the hand in the photo didn't look like mine. It was too slender, the nails perfectly manicured, unlike my perpetually paint-stained fingers.
"This is a mistake, Axel," I said, my voice barely a whisper. "That's not me. That's... that's my ring, and my carving, but it's not my hand."
He scoffed. "Oh, now you're going to deny your own possessions? That bird, you made it for me, Keyla. And that ring, I bought it for you. You think I don't recognize them?"
"I gave that bird to you!" I cried, my voice rising in desperation. "It was on your nightstand last week!"
He snatched the phone away, his face hardening. "Don't bother with your pathetic excuses. You think I'm blind? You think I'm stupid enough to believe your lies?" His thumb moved again, and another picture flashed on the screen.
It was the same hand, the same ring, the same bird. But this time, the carving rested on a rumpled silk sheet. And next to it, partially obscured, were a pair of men's cufflinks. The cufflinks. I had seen them before. They belonged to Jule.
My breath caught in my throat. My mind went blank. The world around me spun, colors and shapes blurring into an indistinct mess. No. This couldn't be happening. My stomach churned, and a wave of nausea washed over me.
My face must have gone stark white, because even Axel seemed to pause, a flicker of something unreadable in his eyes.
"Where... where did you get these pictures, Axel?" I stammered, my voice barely audible. "Who... who sent them to you?"
He didn't answer. He just stared at the phone, then back at me, his eyes filled with a fresh wave of contempt.
"I don't understand," I whispered, my mind in a fog. "The bird... I gave it to you. The ring... it was on my dresser." A sudden thought, cold and unsettling, snaked its way into my mind. Brenda. She had been at our house just days ago, "helping" me clean the studio. She had lingered in our bedroom, making comments about my lack of organization. She had even picked up the bird, admiring its craftsmanship, her eyes too shrewd, too knowing. And the ring... I had taken it off to paint, leaving it on the dresser.
"Brenda," I whispered, the name a bitter taste on my tongue. "Your mother. She was here. She was in our bedroom."
Axel' s face darkened, his jaw clenching. "Don't you dare try to blame my mother for your slutty behavior, Keyla! She saw you with him! She saw you coming out of Jule's office building late at night!"
"No!" I cried, the realization hitting me like a train. "She must have stolen them! She took the ring, and the carving, and she set this whole thing up! She's trying to frame me, Axel! She's always hated me!"
His eyes widened for a split second, a flicker of doubt, perhaps, before it was violently extinguished by a fresh surge of fury. "You BITCH!" he roared, his voice shaking the very foundations of the ruined studio. "You think you can turn my mother against me? You think I'll believe your pathetic lies about her?"
He raised his foot and kicked me hard in the side, just below my ribs. The pain was excruciating, stealing my breath, forcing a guttural cry from my lips. I doubled over, clutching my side, gasping for air. My mother screamed, rushing forward, but Axel pushed her back with a violent shove, sending her reeling against a broken easel.
"She would never do that!" Axel bellowed, his voice filled with a blind, unreasoning loyalty. "My mother loves me! She would never lie to me about this!" He kicked me again, harder this time, his rage consuming him. "You're just trying to deflect, aren't you? Trying to make me doubt her word!"
I curled into a ball, trying to protect my throbbing side, my pregnant belly. But he wasn't done. He kicked me again, and again, his foot connecting with my legs, my arms, my back. Each blow echoed the pain in my heart, a testament to the man he had become. The man who would rather believe a fabricated lie from his manipulative mother than the wife who had stood by him for years. The husband who was now beating me, his pregnant wife, into the ground.
"Axel, please!" My mother's voice was a desperate, choked sob. "You're going to kill her! Stop, please stop!"
But he didn't. He just kept kicking, his face a mask of primal fury, his words a stream of venom. "You deserve this, Keyla! You deserve every bit of this! You think you can make a fool of me? You think you can betray me and get away with it?"
I lay there, helpless, the physical pain a dull throb compared to the agonizing ache in my soul. My vision blurred again, this time from the tears that streamed down my face, hot and stinging against my skin. He was destroying me, piece by agonizing piece. And with each kick, with each hateful word, the last vestiges of my love for him died a slow, painful death.