
He Crushed My Fingers to Protect His Mistress
Chapter 5
“Apologize to Mabel. Now.” Silas’s voice was a low, vibrating threat that seemed to suck the oxygen from the room.
I stared at him, my spine rigid. “I will not apologize for something I didn’t do.”
His jaw ticked. The air between us snapped. He lunged.
Before my best friend could intervene, Silas’s hands—the very same hands that had once traced my knuckles with reverent awe under the dim lights of a concert hall—clamped around my wrists like iron manacles.
“Silas!” my friend shouted, stepping forward, but he shoved her back with a violent jerk of his shoulder, dragging me toward the heavy oak door of his study.
“You want to break things, Emory?” he snarled. His breath was hot against my cheek, smelling of aged scotch and cold mint. “You want to understand what it feels like?”
“Silas, stop!” I gasped, my heels skidding uselessly against the polished hardwood.
He didn’t stop. He pinned me against the doorframe. Mabel stood a few feet away, cradling her perfectly intact, bandaged hand against her chest. Her eyes were wide with manufactured terror, but the corners of her mouth twitched upward. A microscopic tell of absolute triumph.
Silas forced my hands flat against the thick oak jamb. My long, slender fingers—my livelihood, my voice, my entire soul.
“Silas, please,” I whispered, the sheer, terrifying reality of his intention finally piercing my stoicism.
He didn’t look at my face. He looked at Mabel. Then, with a violent, calculated thrust, he slammed the heavy door shut.
The sound was a wet, sickening crunch that echoed off the vaulted ceiling.
A blinding white light exploded behind my eyes. The pain didn’t register as a physical sensation; it was a deafening, high-pitched ringing that swallowed the room whole. My knees gave out. I collapsed to the floor, my mangled hands falling uselessly into my lap. I didn’t scream. The agony was so absolute it paralyzed my lungs.
Silas stood over me, methodically adjusting his cuffs, his chest heaving. “Maybe now you’ll learn to keep your hands to yourself.”
He turned his back on me, wrapped a protective arm around Mabel, and walked out.
***
The fluorescent lights of the specialized hand clinic hummed a flat, monotonous note. Dr. Aris sat across from me, his expression carefully neutral as he clipped the X-ray films to the light board. The stark white lines of my metacarpals and phalanges looked like shattered porcelain.
“The fractures are comminuted,” he explained gently, tracing a silver pen over the jagged breaks. “Coupled with the severe crush trauma to the median and ulnar nerves... I’m sorry, Mrs. Hunter. We can reconstruct the bone, but the micro-dexterity required for your level of performance... You will never play professionally again.”
I stared at the glowing white shards on the board. I felt nothing. The ice that had begun to form in my chest the day I found my mother’s grave desecrated had finally crystallized, freezing my veins solid.
“Thank you, Doctor,” I said. My voice sounded like it belonged to a ghost.
***
The penthouse was a tomb when I returned. I walked past the imported rugs and the cold, modern art, straight into the music room. The black Steinway sat in the center, gleaming under the chandelier like a polished coffin.
I sat on the velvet bench. My hands, now encased in heavy plaster and metal splints, rested like dead weight in my lap. Slowly, agonizingly, I lifted them. I hovered my ruined fingers over the ivory keys. I pressed down.
The splints clacked awkwardly against the wood. The keys depressed, but the movement was too slow, too weak to strike the strings inside. *Silence.*
I pressed again. *Silence.*
The music that had lived inside me since I was a child—the Chopin nocturnes, the furious Rachmaninoff concertos, the gentle lullabies my mother used to hum—was trapped. Silas hadn’t just broken my bones. He had severed my tongue. He had killed the only piece of myself I had managed to keep safe from him.
I closed my eyes, and in the suffocating quiet of the room, I let that version of Emory Walker die.
***
Two days later, Silas boarded a private jet to London, taking Mabel with him for an 'acquisitions trip.'
The moment the front door locked behind them, my best friend slipped out of the service elevator. Her face was tight, her movements brisk and military-sharp.
“He’s gone,” she said, dropping a nondescript black duffel bag onto the kitchen island.
“I know.” I stood up, the dull throb in my hands a constant, grounding rhythm.
She unzipped the bag. Inside were the essentials: my new passport, the documents for the offshore account she had quietly opened, and the waterproof folder containing my original compositions.
“We need to be ready,” she murmured, carefully sliding a few practical pieces of clothing into the remaining space. “He thinks he’s broken you. He thinks you’re a pet waiting for him to return.”
“Let him think it.” I watched her zip the bag closed. “I am not leaving until absolutely everything is in place.”
She stepped closer, her eyes dropping to my casted hands before meeting my gaze. “When the time comes, I won’t be able to call you. He monitors the network.” She reached into her pocket and pulled out a cheap burner phone, sliding it across the marble counter. “Keep this hidden. When you are ready—when the final string snaps—you send me one word.”
“Now,” I whispered.
“Now,” she confirmed, her jaw set. “And I will be at the service entrance in three minutes. You walk out, and you never look back.”
I picked up the plastic phone with my awkward, heavy fingers. I looked around the sprawling, multi-million-dollar penthouse. It didn’t look like a home anymore. It looked like kindling.
“I won't look back,” I promised.
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