
Husband's Lie and My Demise
Chapter 3
Dr. Harrison arrived at our house three days after the funeral, carrying a leather briefcase and the kind of sympathetic expression that made my skin crawl. Augustus had called him—requested a 'consultation' for his 'troubled wife'—and now here he stood in our living room, setting up his little theater of professional concern.
'Valeria, thank you for agreeing to see me,' Harrison said, as if I'd had any choice in the matter.
I sat on the couch, my spine rigid, watching Augustus hover near the doorway like a prison guard. 'I didn't agree to anything.'
'Your husband is worried about you.' Harrison settled into the armchair across from me, pulling out a notepad with practiced ease. 'He mentioned you've been making some unusual claims. About the mudslide incident three years ago?'
'They're not claims. They're facts.' I kept my voice level, refusing to give them the hysterics they were clearly expecting. 'I have medical records—'
'Yes, Augustus showed me those.' Harrison's pen moved across the page, and I hated that I couldn't see what he was writing. 'But you understand how grief can distort our memories? How the mind sometimes creates narratives to cope with trauma?'
'My mind isn't creating anything.' My fingers dug into the couch cushion. 'I pulled him from that building. I broke my ribs dragging him clear of the debris. Those injuries are documented—'
'Injuries that could have multiple explanations.' Harrison's tone was so reasonable, so measured, it made me want to scream. 'Augustus tells me you've been under significant stress. Your mother-in-law's death, the circumstances surrounding it—these are complex emotional situations.'
I looked past him to Augustus, searching for any flicker of the man I'd married. 'You're really doing this? Having me evaluated like I'm—'
'Like you need help,' Augustus finished. 'Which you do, Valeria. This obsession with discrediting Zara, these paranoid accusations—it's not healthy.'
Harrison nodded, his pen still moving. 'Have you experienced any other symptoms? Difficulty sleeping? Intrusive thoughts? Perhaps feelings of persecution?'
'The only persecution I'm feeling is happening right now.' I stood, needing to move, to break free from their careful trap. 'This is insane. You're gaslighting me, trying to make me doubt my own—'
'There it is again,' Augustus said to Harrison, his voice carrying that clinical detachment I'd grown to loathe. 'The paranoia. The inability to accept reality.'
Harrison closed his notepad with a soft snap that sounded like a cell door closing. 'Valeria, I'm going to recommend you start therapy. Regular sessions, possibly medication to help with the anxiety and delusional thinking—'
'I'm not delusional!' The words burst out before I could stop them, and I saw the glance that passed between the two men. Saw how my anger became evidence, my truth twisted into illness.
'Of course not,' Harrison said with that maddening sympathy. 'But sometimes we all need support. And if you continue to resist treatment...' He looked at Augustus. 'There are other options. Involuntary commitment, if the delusions persist and begin to pose a risk.'
The threat hung in the air like smoke. I stared at Augustus, waiting for him to object, to defend me, to remember that this was his wife they were discussing like a dangerous patient.
But he just nodded. 'Whatever's necessary to help her.'
That night, I found out exactly how thorough Augustus had been in destroying my credibility. My phone lit up with a message from Claire, my supervisor at the literacy center where I volunteered twice a week. 'I'm so sorry, but the board has decided... given the concerns about your current state... we think it's best if you take an indefinite leave.'
Concerns. Current state. The carefully neutral language of professional dismissal.
I called her immediately. 'Claire, what are you talking about? What concerns?'
'Valeria, I—' She sighed, and I could hear the discomfort in her voice. 'Your husband contacted several board members. He said you've been going through a difficult time, making erratic claims, possibly experiencing some kind of breakdown. We have to think about the children—'
'I'm not dangerous!' My voice cracked. 'I've worked with those kids for two years. You know me—'
'I thought I did.' The words were gentle but devastating. 'But Augustus is a respected physician, and he's genuinely worried about you. The board voted this morning. I'm sorry.'
The line went dead, and I sat there staring at my phone, watching my life systematically disassemble. The next morning, I discovered Augustus had frozen our joint accounts. 'For your own protection,' he'd written in an email, as if I were a child who couldn't be trusted with money. 'Until you're receiving proper treatment.'
I had three hundred dollars in cash and a credit card that would probably be canceled by the end of the week.
The witnesses came next—or rather, the lack of them. I'd spent days tracking down people who'd been at the mudslide scene, finding names in news reports and social media posts from three years ago. But when I finally reached them, their stories had changed. Hardened. Shifted.
'I'm sorry, I really don't remember much,' one woman told me over the phone. 'It was so chaotic, and honestly, I think I had my facts wrong before. Zara Pierce was definitely the one who pulled that doctor out. I remember her face now.'
'But you told reporters you saw a woman in a blue jacket—that was me. I was wearing—'
'Like I said, it was chaotic. I was mistaken.' Her voice turned cold. 'Please don't call again.'
It was the same with every contact. Either they'd suddenly 'remembered' seeing Zara, or they claimed to remember nothing at all. The pattern was too perfect, too coordinated to be coincidence.
Then Frank Morrison called.
He was an elderly man who'd been in the building next to the collapse, and his voice shook when he spoke. 'Miss Coleman? I need to tell you something. That Pierce woman—she came to see me last week. Offered me five thousand dollars to sign a statement saying I saw her pull your husband out.'
My heart hammered against my ribs. 'Did you sign it?'
'No.' A pause. 'But she said if I didn't cooperate, if I talked to anyone about our conversation, she'd make sure certain things from my past came to light. Things that could hurt my grandchildren.' His voice dropped to a whisper. 'I'm calling you anyway because what she's doing—it's wrong. But I can't be your witness. I can't risk my family.'
'I understand,' I managed, even though understanding didn't stop the crushing weight in my chest. 'Thank you for telling me.'
'Be careful,' he said before hanging up. 'These people—they're dangerous. They've already gotten to everyone else.'
I sat in the growing darkness of my empty house, listening to the silence where Eleanor's laughter used to echo, and understood that I was fighting a war already lost. They'd taken my credibility, my reputation, my financial independence. They'd isolated me, branded me unstable, turned my truth into delusion.
And Augustus—my husband, the man I'd risked my life to save—was leading the assault.
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