
He Crushed My Fingers to Protect His Mistress
Chapter 4
I returned to the penthouse with my mother’s grave still echoing in my mind—the sight of her headstone shoved aside for a dog’s monument. My hands trembled as I opened the door, the silence of the empty apartment wrapping around me like a shroud. Silas was in his study, the blue light of his computer screen casting shadows across his face. He didn’t look up when I entered, his fingers continuing their rhythmic tapping on the keyboard.
“You had my mother’s grave desecrated,” I said, my voice barely above a whisper. The words hung in the air between us, heavy and final.
Silas paused, his fingers hovering over the keys. Slowly, methodically, he reached for his left cufflink and straightened it. Then the right one. The familiar gesture—his tell for suppressed rage—sent a chill down my spine. I had seen it countless times over the years, each adjustment a warning of the storm to come.
“Mabel’s dog died,” he said flatly, still not looking at me. “She was distraught. The burial plot was the only one available on short notice.”
“That was my mother’s grave,” I repeated, my voice gaining strength. “The only place I had left to speak to her. You had her moved to make room for an animal.”
Finally, Silas turned to face me, his eyes cold and distant. “It’s just a piece of land, Emory. Your sentimentality is misplaced. Princess was a living creature that brought joy to people. Your mother is gone. Let it go.”
“Let it go?” The words felt like acid on my tongue. “You’re asking me to let go of my mother’s memory because your mistress’s dog needed a burial plot?”
Silas straightened his cufflinks again, the metal catching the light. “You’re being irrational. And cruel, frankly. Mabel is heartbroken over Princess. The least you could do is show some compassion instead of this... this selfish display.”
I stared at him, this stranger wearing my husband’s face, and felt something inside me shift. Not break—shift. Like tectonic plates moving beneath the surface of the earth, a change so profound it would reshape everything.
“I see,” I said quietly, and turned to leave.
---
My best friend was waiting in the car downstairs, her engine running. One look at my face told her everything she needed to know.
“Get in,” she said, her voice tight with concern.
I slid into the passenger seat, the leather cool against my skin. For a long moment, we just sat there, the engine humming softly.
“It’s over, isn’t it?” she asked finally.
I nodded, unable to speak past the knot in my throat.
She reached across the console and squeezed my hand. “Then we move forward. Not tonight—you need time. But soon.”
As she drove me away from the penthouse, away from Silas, I felt a strange calm settle over me. The grief was still there, a gaping wound where my heart had been, but alongside it was something new. Clarity. Purpose.
“I need to open a separate bank account,” I said suddenly, breaking the silence. “One he can’t access.”
My friend glanced at me, a small, fierce smile playing at her lips. “Already on it. I’ve been thinking this might come to a head soon. The paperwork is in my glove compartment.”
“And my sheet music,” I added. “The original compositions. I need to get them out.”
“I’ll come back tomorrow with a duffel bag,” she promised. “We’ll move them to my place. He’ll never look for them there.”
---
The next afternoon, as we were carefully packing my most precious compositions into a waterproof bag, the penthouse door burst open. Mabel stood in the doorway, her right hand dramatically bandaged, tears streaming down her perfect face.
“Oh, Emory,” she sobbed, her voice trembling. “How could you? My poor hand!”
Silas appeared behind her, his face a mask of cold fury as he guided her into the room. “Explain yourself,” he demanded. “Mabel’s hand is broken.”
I stared at them both, at the elaborate performance unfolding before me. My best friend stepped forward, her body tensing like a shield.
“What are you talking about?” I asked, my voice steady despite the chaos in my chest.
Mabel held up her bandaged hand, cradling it against her chest. “You slammed the car door on it,” she whimpered. “This morning, when I was getting out. You did it on purpose, Emory. You were so angry about Princess.”
The lie was so transparent, so perfectly crafted, that I almost admired her audacity. Almost.
“I wasn’t even in the car this morning,” I said quietly. “I was at my mother’s grave. Or what’s left of it.”
Mabel’s eyes widened, a flash of triumph quickly masked by fresh tears. “You’re lying,” she whispered. “You’ve always been jealous of me. You’ve always wanted to hurt me.”
Silas’s hand settled on her shoulder, protective and possessive. “Enough, Emory,” he said, his voice low and dangerous. “Apologize to Mabel. Now.”
I looked between them—my husband and the woman who had systematically destroyed everything I had built—and felt that tectonic shift again. This time, there was no going back.
You may also like





