
Husband's Heartless Betrayal
Chapter 2
Three months after I found Greyson in that basement, we stood before a small gathering in my parents' garden. The ceremony was nothing like the grand affair we'd originally planned—no cathedral, no five hundred guests, no orchestra. Just family, Marcus, Caspian, and a handful of close friends who'd stayed silent when we asked them to.
Greyson's hands trembled as he slipped the ring onto my finger. I felt the tremor travel through his fingertips, watched the way his jaw clenched as he forced out the words of his vows. When someone's phone buzzed during the exchange of rings, he flinched so violently that my mother gasped.
I squeezed his hand, anchoring him. "I'm here," I whispered, low enough that only he could hear. "You're safe."
His eyes met mine for just a moment—those eyes that used to hold such confidence now haunted by shadows I couldn't chase away. But he nodded and continued, his voice barely above a whisper.
The reception was brief. Greyson managed twenty minutes before the noise and the crowd became too much. I found him in the bathroom, back pressed against the wall, breathing in short, ragged gasps that I'd learned meant a panic attack was coming.
"Everyone out," I called through the door to the curious aunts hovering nearby. "Give us a moment."
I didn't touch him—not yet. Dr. Reeves had taught me that. Instead, I sat on the floor across from him and began counting aloud, slow and steady, until his breathing started to match my rhythm.
"I'm sorry," he choked out when he could finally speak. "I'm sorry, Briar. You deserve better than this. Better than me."
"Don't," I said firmly. "We're married now. For better or worse, remember?"
That night, in the hotel suite I'd decorated with soft lighting and his favorite music playing quietly, I tried to make our wedding night something beautiful. I wore the ivory silk nightgown I'd bought months ago, back when I'd imagined this moment so differently.
When I approached the bed where Greyson sat rigid, still in his dress shirt, he let me take his hand. I guided him to lie down, pressed a gentle kiss to his forehead.
"We don't have to do anything," I murmured. "I just want to hold you."
But the moment I slid beneath the covers and wrapped my arms around him, his entire body went rigid. His breathing accelerated, turned harsh and panicked. Then he was shoving me away, scrambling to the far corner of the bed, eyes wild and unseeing.
"Don't touch me!" The words ripped from his throat, raw and desperate. "Please, don't—I can't—"
He collapsed then, curling into himself, shoulders shaking with sobs that sounded like they were tearing him apart from the inside. I stayed frozen where I was, my own tears falling silently as I watched the man I loved break into pieces.
"I'm here," I said eventually, my voice steady despite everything crumbling inside me. "I'm right here, and I'm not going anywhere. However long it takes, Greyson. However long you need."
He cried until dawn, and I sat vigil through it all, close enough to reach if he wanted me, far enough away that he could breathe. This was our wedding night. This was what we'd become.
The pattern repeated itself in the weeks that followed. Greyson retreating into himself, me giving everything I had to pull him back. I attended his therapy sessions, learned the triggers, memorized the warning signs. I took over the business meetings he could no longer handle, sitting across from hard-faced executives who looked at me like I was playing dress-up in my husband's world.
But it wasn't enough. Justice—that's what would heal him. That's what I told myself as I sat in our study late one night, surrounded by files on Greyson's rival. If I could make the man who did this pay, if I could prove that monsters don't win, maybe Greyson could finally be free.
"You're playing with fire."
I looked up to find Marcus in the doorway, his expression grave.
"Someone has to," I said, turning back to my investigation notes. "The police aren't doing anything. That man is still out there, still running his business, still—"
"Still dangerous," Marcus interrupted. "Briar, I'm warning you as a friend. These people don't play by rules. They don't care that you're trying to help your husband."
I met his gaze steadily. "I don't care what they do to me. I care about Greyson."
Marcus sighed, running a hand through his hair. "That's exactly what I'm afraid of."
But I'd already made my choice. I hired the private investigators, followed the paper trails, learned to navigate the shadowy world of corporate warfare and criminal enterprise. Every piece of evidence I gathered felt like a small victory, a step closer to the justice that would set us both free.
I didn't know then that some prices are too high to pay. I didn't know that my crusade for justice would cost me everything—my body, my future, and eventually, the marriage I was fighting so hard to save.
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