
Husband's Cruel Betrayal
Chapter 2
The wine cellar door slammed shut with a finality that echoed through my bones. I heard the lock click, then Sterling's footsteps retreating up the stairs, growing fainter with each step until silence swallowed everything.
Darkness pressed against my eyes. The air smelled of oak barrels and dust, a cloying sweetness that turned my stomach. I felt along the wall until my fingers found the light switch, but nothing happened when I flipped it. Of course. He'd thought of everything.
Three days, he'd said. Three days to "reflect on your place in this household."
I'd made the mistake of asking why. Why Nova's return changed nothing about our marriage. Why he still wore his wedding ring if he hated me so completely. The questions had tumbled out during breakfast, my voice trembling but determined. Sterling had set down his coffee cup with deliberate calm, smiled at Nova across the table, then gripped my wrist hard enough to leave marks.
"You question me?" His voice had been soft, dangerous. "After everything you've done?"
Now I sat on the concrete floor, my back against wine racks that stretched into blackness. Above me, floorboards creaked. Laughter drifted down—Nova's bright peal followed by Sterling's deeper rumble. The sound of silverware on china. The pop of a cork.
They were having dinner.
My stomach cramped with hunger, but that wasn't the worst part. The worst part was the cold. November had arrived, and the basement held onto the chill like a living thing. I wrapped my arms around myself, trying to conserve warmth, and counted the hours by the shifting quality of darkness near the small window high on the wall.
On the second day, Sterling opened the door long enough to toss down a heel of bread and a bottle of water. I scrambled toward it, hating myself for the desperation, but he'd already closed the door before I reached the stairs.
By the third day, my thoughts had grown sluggish. The cold had seeped so deep into my bones that I couldn't stop shaking. But something else had crystallized in that darkness—clarity. Sterling hadn't married me out of misguided grief or even simple revenge. This was systematic. Calculated. He enjoyed watching me break.
The window. I'd noticed it on the first day—a rectangular opening near the ceiling, maybe eighteen inches wide. Small, but I was smaller now than I'd been five years ago. Sterling's "diet suggestions" had whittled me down to angles and shadows.
I dragged a wine crate beneath the window, stacked another on top. My muscles screamed as I climbed, weakened from days without food. The window frame was stuck, painted shut, but I pushed with everything I had left. It gave with a groan that seemed deafening in the silence.
Cold air rushed in, sharp and clean. Freedom was right there, just beyond my fingertips.
I'd gotten my shoulders through the opening when I heard the door unlock behind me.
"Clever," Sterling's voice was almost admiring. "But not clever enough."
I tried to pull myself up faster, but his hand closed around my ankle. The pull was sudden, violent. I fell, the crates scattering beneath me, and landed hard on the concrete. Pain exploded through my side.
Sterling stood in the doorway, backlit by the stairwell light, a wine bottle dangling from his other hand. Not one of the expensive vintages—something cheap, heavy.
"You really thought I wouldn't hear you?" He descended the stairs slowly, each footstep deliberate. "That I'd let you leave?"
I tried to crawl backward, but my body wouldn't cooperate. He crouched beside me, setting the bottle down with a gentle clink.
"Your ankle looks fine," he observed, his fingers wrapping around it with clinical precision. "That seems unfair, doesn't it? After what you did to Nova."
I saw the bottle rising, saw the arc it would make, but my warning came too late, trapped in my throat. Glass met bone with a crack that I felt more than heard. White-hot agony ripped through my leg, stealing my breath, my vision, everything except the pain.
When I could see again, Sterling was standing, filming me with his phone. The red recording light blinked in the darkness like a malevolent eye.
"Crawl," he said softly. "Up the stairs. I want Nova to see what happens to people who try to leave."
I couldn't. My ankle was already swelling, the bone grinding wrong beneath shattered flesh. But Sterling's smile told me he'd wait however long it took.
So I crawled. Hands and knees, dragging my destroyed ankle behind me, up thirteen concrete steps while he filmed every moment. Each movement sent fresh waves of agony through my body, but I didn't cry. I wouldn't give him that.
At the top, Nova waited. Her expression held something I couldn't quite read—satisfaction, yes, but also a flicker of something else. Doubt? Fear? It vanished before I could name it.
"Breakfast tomorrow," Sterling announced, helping me to my feet with mocking gentleness. "Seven AM. Don't be late."
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