
Husband's Heartless Betrayal
Chapter 3
Six months into our marriage, I stood in the shadow of an abandoned factory on the city's edge, my heart hammering against my ribs. The recording device felt heavy where it was taped to my stomach, hidden beneath my loose blouse. This was it—the moment that could finally free Greyson from his nightmares.
I'd tracked his rival, Victor Munoz, for months, piecing together his underground business network through bank records, whispered conversations, and carefully cultivated informants. Tonight, he was meeting with potential investors in this decrepit building, far from prying eyes.
"This is insane, Briar," Marcus had said when I told him my plan. "Let the authorities handle it."
"The authorities have done nothing for six months," I'd replied, remembering how Greyson had woken screaming again last night, his body drenched in sweat. "I'm just going to get evidence. In and out."
Now, as I slipped through a rusted side door, those words seemed naively optimistic. The interior was dimly lit, with voices echoing from somewhere below. I followed the sound down a narrow hallway, my steps careful and measured.
Through a crack in a partially open door, I could see them—five men in expensive suits, Victor at the head of the table, his silver hair gleaming under the single overhead light. I pressed the button on my recorder and leaned closer.
"King was just the beginning," Victor was saying, swirling amber liquid in a crystal glass. "A message to anyone who thinks they can—"
The floorboard beneath me creaked, loud as a gunshot in the tense silence.
Everything happened at once. The door flew open, hands grabbed me, and I was dragged into the room, thrown roughly onto the concrete floor. Victor stood over me, his face a mask of cold fury.
"Mrs. King," he said softly. "What an unexpected pleasure."
One of his men found the recording device, ripping it from beneath my blouse with a sneer. Victor studied it, then met my eyes with a smile that chilled me to my core.
"You're as foolish as your husband," he said. "Did you really think it would be this easy?"
"He deserves justice," I spat, struggling against the hands holding me. "You can't just—"
"I can do whatever I want," Victor cut me off. "As I'm about to demonstrate."
He nodded to his men. I fought wildly as they dragged me toward the stairwell, kicking and screaming until a sharp blow to my temple left me dazed. Through blurred vision, I saw the concrete steps rushing up to meet me as they threw me down.
Pain exploded through my body—white-hot, all-consuming. I heard something crack as I tumbled, my left leg twisting unnaturally beneath me. Each impact drove the breath from my lungs until I finally came to rest at the bottom, the world fading to black around me.
I awoke to the harsh glare of hospital lights and the steady beep of monitors. My entire body felt like it had been shattered and poorly reassembled. When I tried to move, agony shot through me, and a nurse appeared at my side.
"Don't try to move, Mrs. King," she said gently. "The doctor will be in soon."
"My leg," I whispered, my throat raw. Something felt wrong—terribly, irrevocably wrong. "What happened to my leg?"
Her eyes filled with sympathy, and I knew before the doctor arrived with his careful words and clinical explanations. The damage had been too severe—crushed bones, severed arteries, massive tissue death. They'd had no choice but to amputate below the knee.
But that wasn't all. As I lay there, trying to absorb the reality of my missing limb, the doctor continued speaking, his voice seeming to come from very far away.
"...internal injuries... reproductive system... significant scarring... unlikely you'll ever be able to carry a child..."
I turned my face to the wall, tears streaming silently down my cheeks. This was the price of my crusade for justice—my leg, my future children, perhaps even my marriage.
Greyson came to see me that evening, his face ashen, eyes haunted with fresh guilt. He stood in the doorway for a long moment before approaching the bed, his movements stiff and uncertain.
"Briar," he whispered, reaching for my hand but stopping short of touching me. "I'm so sorry. This is all my fault."
"No," I said firmly, though my voice trembled. "It's his fault. Only his."
Greyson looked at the empty space beneath the sheet where my left leg should have been, and something in his expression crumbled. He turned away, shoulders hunched.
"I can't do this," he said, so quietly I almost didn't hear. "I can't watch you suffer because of me."
And then he was gone, leaving me alone with the steady beep of the monitors and the crushing weight of everything I'd lost.
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