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His Love, My Hell, Her Justice

His Love, My Hell, Her Justice

My wedding day was ruined by a crazed woman named Isolde, who claimed my husband, Ezekiel, was her soulmate from a past life. Then, after a car accident, Ezekiel faked amnesia, siding with her and putting me through hell. He let Isolde murder my mother, forced me to face my deepest fears, and poisoned me in public. When I finally had Isolde arrested, Ezekiel's revenge was swift and brutal. He kidnapped me and, in a final act of cruelty, snapped the neck of my puppy, Muffin-the only comfort I had left. He thought he had broken me, that he had destroyed every last piece of my soul. He was wrong. He had just unleashed a monster. Now, from the shadows, I will dismantle his empire, ruin his life, and make him pay for every tear I shed. My revenge has just begun.
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Chapter 4

I awoke to the sterile scent of antiseptic and the muted beeping of medical equipment. My head throbbed, my body ached, and my throat felt raw and scraped. The walls were a bland cream color, the bed stiff. A hospital room. "Mom?" I croaked, my voice a dry whisper. A nurse, a kind-faced woman with tired eyes, leaned over me. "Ms. Mathis? You're awake. How are you feeling?" "My mother," I repeated, a frantic urgency in my voice. "Is she here? Is she okay?" The nurse' s face softened, a look of profound sadness replacing her professional calm. "I'm so sorry, dear. Your mother passed away last night. We did everything we could." The words hit me like a physical blow, even though I had already known. Hearing it confirmed, from a stranger, in a sterile room, somehow made it more real, more devastating. A choked sob escaped my lips, tearing through my raw throat. My vision blurred with fresh tears. She was truly gone. My kind, gentle mother, a casualty of their cruel games. "It was... Isolde, wasn't it?" I whispered, my voice thick with grief and a dawning, terrible realization. "Ezekiel... he blocked the paramedics. He let her die." The nurse hesitated, her eyes darting away. "I can't comment on that, Ms. Mathis. What I can tell you is that your mother's condition was critical when she was found, and there were indeed... complications regarding timely medical intervention." Complications. A polite euphemism for murder. Ezekiel had allowed it. He had stood by and let my mother die. And it was all because of Isolde, because of his twisted infatuation. My grief, initially a crushing weight, began to curdle into something colder, harder. It was no longer just sorrow. It was rage. A burning, all-consuming inferno that threatened to consume me whole. I had loved him. I had loved him with every fiber of my being. And he had repaid that love with betrayal, with cruelty, with the death of my mother. He had turned into a monster, a puppet controlled by a madwoman. "I will make them pay," I vowed, my voice a fierce whisper, the words tasting like ash and iron. "I will make them both pay." I spent the next few days in a haze of grief and vengeful clarity. I made all the arrangements for my mother alone. No one from Ezekiel's side called, no one offered condolences. It was as if I had ceased to exist, replaced by Isolde. The funeral was small, just a handful of my mother's oldest friends and some distant relatives. Ezekiel and Isolde were nowhere to be seen. They were probably celebrating, I thought, a bitter taste in my mouth, their twisted love blooming over my mother's grave. After the cremation, I clutched the small urn, my mother' s ashes, to my chest. It was all that was left of her. My heart felt hollow, a gaping void that nothing could fill. I drove back to the house I had shared with Ezekiel, the house that used to be my home. The front door was still splintered, the sign of the violence that had taken my mother. I walked through the wreckage, the bloodstains on the carpet now dried and dark. Each step was a fresh wound. Ezekiel was waiting for me in the living room. Isolde was not with him. He sat on a pristine sofa, an untouched island in the sea of chaos. He looked up as I entered, his face impassive. "Brielle," he said, his voice devoid of emotion. "You're back." I gripped the urn tighter. "You killed her, Ezekiel," I stated, my voice flat, holding back the torrent of emotion threatening to erupt. He sighed, a dismissive sound. "Your mother's death was a regrettable accident. Isolde was under duress. She was distraught. You pushing her to such extremes... you bear a significant portion of the blame for this outcome." My jaw dropped. "I pushed her? She broke into my mother's house! She attacked her! You blocked the paramedics!" "Isolde reports that your mother was attempting to steal her personal belongings," he said, perfectly calm, as if discussing a business deal. "She was merely defending herself and her reputation. And as for the paramedics, your incessant demands for attention on the phone tied up the emergency lines. It was a chaotic situation." He truly believed Isolde' s lies. Or he pretended to. It didn't matter anymore. The outcome was the same. He stood up, walking towards me. He held a legal document in his hand. "However, Isolde has requested that, in light of the... unfortunate incident, we grant her legal immunity. A formal pardon, if you will. For her emotional state. It would be a gesture of peace." My eyes narrowed. "You want me to pardon the woman who murdered my mother?" "It would be for the best," he insisted, extending the document. "For everyone involved. To move forward." A wave of pure, unadulterated fury washed over me. I ripped the document from his hand, tearing it into a hundred pieces. The fragments fluttered to the floor like malignant confetti. "Never," I snarled, my voice raw with hatred. "I will never pardon that monster. And I will never forgive you." His eyes, for a fleeting moment, held a spark of surprise, then hardened into cold fury. He grabbed my arm, his grip like iron, squeezing until pain shot up my shoulder. "You will learn respect, Brielle," he growled. "You will learn your place." He shoved me against the wall, hard. My head hit the plaster with a dull thud, sending stars dancing before my eyes. My grip on the urn loosened. It clattered to the floor, the lid popping open. My mother's ashes spilled out, a cloud of grey dust mixing with the bloodstains on the carpet. A gasp escaped my lips, not from the pain, but from the horror. My mother' s remains. Desecrated. Ezekiel' s eyes widened for a fraction of a second, a flicker of something resembling regret or shock. But it vanished as quickly as it appeared. He squared his shoulders, his jaw tight. "You're being irrational, Brielle," he said, his voice stiff. "This is your own doing. You are out of control." I could only stare at the grey dust, my vision blurred by tears of rage and grief. My mother. My mother's ashes. "My mother is dead," I whispered, the words barely audible, choked with despair. "They killed her. And now... now you've done this." Just then, his phone rang. It was a distinctive, chirpy ringtone, one I recognized from Isolde. He checked the screen, and his face immediately softened. The mask of cold anger dissolved, replaced by tenderness. He stepped away from me, moving to answer the call, his back to the spilled ashes. "Isolde, my love? What's wrong? Are you alright?" His voice was brimming with concern, with adoration. I listened, stunned, as he spoke to her, completely oblivious to my agony, to the desecration of my mother's remains. He was comforting her, talking about "stress" and "my poor baby." "Yes, my darling," he cooed into the phone. "I'm coming right away. Don't worry, I'll take care of everything. Brielle is just... having a moment. It's nothing." He ended the call, his face still soft with concern for Isolde. He turned back to me, his tenderness for her replaced by a cold, dismissive stare. "Isolde needs me," he announced, as if that explained everything. "She was feeling unwell. Again, your fault, Brielle." He gestured vaguely at the scattered ashes. "Clean this up. And then, you will sign these documents." He pulled a fresh set of papers from his pocket, divorce papers, and another pardon for Isolde. "You will sign them. Or I will make sure you suffer consequences far worse than what you have endured so far." "You... you really think I did this?" I choked out, gesturing at the spilled ashes. "You think I would desecrate my own mother's remains?" He merely scoffed. "You're clearly unstable, Brielle. You lashed out. You're upset. I understand. But you need to take responsibility for your actions." "She was never pregnant!" I screamed, desperate to make him see, to break through his delusion. "She's always been sterile! She told me once, years ago!" His jaw tightened. "Do you think I'm a fool, Brielle? Do you think I wouldn't have checked? Isolde is carrying my child. You're just jealous. Pathetic." He tossed the papers at my feet. "Sign them. Now. Or I will ensure your life is a complete and utter ruin. You will have nothing, not even your name. I will make sure you cannot work, cannot have a home, cannot even buy food. Everything you have, everything you could ever hope for, will be gone. And if you dare to expose any of this, Brielle, I will make sure your family's reputation is in tatters, and any remaining loved ones will suffer." He grabbed a pen from the table, practically shoving it into my hand. My fingers trembled, my eyes fixed on the spilled ashes. He was going to rescue Isolde, leave me to clean up the remains of my mother, and force me to sign away my freedom and my right to justice. My world had imploded. My heart, once broken, was now a shriveled, dead organ in my chest. He watched me, his eyes cold and unyielding. "Sign it, Brielle. Unless you want more of this." He gestured around the shattered room, at the spilled ashes. My breath hitched. My hand shook uncontrollably as I looked at the pen, then at the scattered remains of my mother. He wouldn't stop. He would destroy everything. I picked up the pen. My fingers closed around it, the plastic cold and hard. I looked at the divorce papers, the pardon for Isolde. A bitter, ironic laugh bubbled up in my throat. He took the signed papers triumphantly, a cruel smile gracing his lips. "Good," he said, as if I had just done a simple chore. "Now, clean up this mess. I have to go." He left without another word, without a backward glance, without even a flicker of compassion for my devastation. The front door slammed shut, echoing through the hollow house. I stood there, alone in the wreckage, my mother's ashes spread across the bloodstained carpet. The enormity of what had just happened, of what I had just signed, crashed over me. I fell to my knees, tears finally flowing, hot and acidic, burning trails down my cheeks. I reached out, gathering the grey dust, trying to scoop it back into the urn. But it was impossible. It mixed with the blood, with the dust, with the shattered fragments of my life. I wept, a desolate, broken sound, clutching the fouled ashes to my chest. "I'm so sorry, Mom," I sobbed, the words ripped from my soul. "I'm so, so sorry. I couldn't save you. I couldn't even protect your memory." But even in that moment of utter despair, a steel resolve formed deep within me. This wasn't the end. This was the beginning. They thought they had broken me. They thought they had won. They were terribly, terribly wrong. All they had done was free me to seek my vengeance.