
From Betrayal to Bliss
Chapter 3
The manila envelope felt heavier than it should have as I sealed it shut. Inside were the divorce papers, signed and notarized, along with something that would ensure Damien never came looking for me—a death certificate bearing my name. Katherine Reynolds was about to die, officially and permanently.
My bandaged hand throbbed as I wrote the address on the envelope: Reynolds & Associates, attention Damien Reynolds. Let him open it in front of Macy. Let them both see what their cruelty had accomplished.
"Are you sure about this, sweetheart?" Dad asked from the doorway, his weathered face creased with worry. He'd aged years in the past week, watching me stumble through the house like a ghost.
"Katherine Reynolds needs to be dead," I whispered, my voice still raw from screaming. "She was weak. She was a fool. I won't be her anymore."
Dad drove me to the courier service, his silence heavy with unspoken concern. As I handed over the envelope, I felt something inside me break free—or maybe break apart entirely. Either way, it was done.
The flight to Seattle passed in a haze of pain medication and exhaustion. Dad's house looked exactly as I remembered from childhood visits—the blue shutters, the garden Mom had planted before she died, the porch swing where I'd dreamed of my future. How naive those dreams seemed now.
I collapsed into my old bedroom and didn't emerge for three weeks.
The days blurred together in a fog of grief and trauma. Dad brought me meals I barely touched, changed my bandages with gentle hands, and never once said 'I told you so' about Damien. Sometimes I caught him standing in my doorway, just watching me breathe, as if afraid I might stop.
My hand was healing, but slowly. Three fingernails gone, the nail beds raw and tender. The doctor said they might grow back, but they'd never look the same. Like me, I supposed. Some damage was permanent.
Meanwhile, in another part of the city, Macy was celebrating her victory.
I learned about it later, through a private investigator Dad had hired to monitor the situation. The photos arrived via encrypted email: my beloved studio, Firefly, reduced to rubble and ash. My jewelry-making equipment smashed beyond recognition. Sketches and designs I'd worked on for years—the only remnants of who I'd been before Damien—burned to nothing.
The investigator's report was clinical: "Subject Macy O'Brien broke into the premises at approximately 2 AM. Security footage shows her destroying equipment with a baseball bat before dousing the space with gasoline. Fire department responded to the blaze at 2:47 AM. Total loss."
Attached were screenshots of text messages she'd sent to Damien: "Thought you'd like to see what happens to obstacles in our path. Katherine got what she deserved. Now there's nothing left of her pathetic little dreams. We're free, baby."
I stared at the photos until my eyes burned. Every tool I'd saved for, every sketch that represented hours of creative passion, every piece of equipment that had helped me feel like myself—all of it reduced to smoke and memory. She hadn't just destroyed my studio. She'd tried to erase every trace of who I'd been before I became Damien's wife.
But she'd made one crucial mistake. She thought destroying my past would eliminate my future. Instead, it crystallized something inside me—a determination I hadn't felt in years.
"Dad," I called out one morning, my voice stronger than it had been since the warehouse. "I think I need help. Professional help."
He appeared in my doorway instantly, hope flickering across his features. "There's someone I'd like you to meet. A psychologist. I've known him for years—actually wanted to introduce you to him once, before... well, before Damien."
Dr. Collin Smith's office was nothing like I'd expected. Instead of sterile white walls and intimidating diplomas, it felt warm and lived-in. Books lined the shelves, plants thrived in the windows, and soft jazz played quietly in the background. The man himself was younger than I'd anticipated, with kind eyes behind wire-rimmed glasses and an easy smile that didn't feel forced.
"Katherine," he said gently, gesturing to a comfortable armchair. "Your father's told me a little about what you've been through. But I'd like to hear it from you, in your own words and your own time."
I sat down, my bandaged hand hidden in my lap, and tried to speak. The words stuck in my throat like broken glass. How could I explain the depth of the betrayal? The physical agony? The way I'd lost myself so completely that I didn't even know who I was anymore?
"I..." I started, then stopped. Tears I thought I'd exhausted began flowing again. "I don't know where to begin."
"Begin wherever feels right," Collin said softly. "We have all the time you need."
For the first time in weeks, I felt like maybe—just maybe—there was a path forward through the darkness.
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