
Husband's Manipulative Games
Chapter 2
Morning light filtered through the hospital blinds, casting harsh stripes across my bed. I hadn't slept. How could I? The hollow ache in my arms where my baby should have been kept me awake, staring at the ceiling as nurses came and went, their pitying glances worse than any physical pain.
The door swung open. Marcus stood there, immaculate in his white coat despite the night we'd had. Behind him, Elena hovered like a shadow, her eyes red-rimmed and swollen. She clutched Marcus's arm, her knuckles white against the fabric of his sleeve.
"Jessica," Marcus said, his voice clinical and detached. "Elena has come to see you."
I turned away, unable to look at either of them. The monitors beside my bed beeped steadily, the only sound in the suffocating silence.
"Elena has been extremely distressed," Marcus continued. "What happened yesterday triggered one of her worst anxiety episodes."
I whipped my head around, disbelief burning through my grief. "What happened yesterday? Our baby died, Marcus. Our child is dead because you—"
"This is exactly the kind of emotional volatility I'm concerned about," Marcus cut me off, speaking to the room as if dictating notes. "Elena requires a stable environment for her recovery, and your hostility is counterproductive."
Elena stepped forward, trembling visibly. "I just... I just wanted to say I'm sorry about the baby," she whispered, her voice breaking. "But when you screamed like that in the hallway... it triggered my condition so badly."
The audacity stole my breath. I had been in labor, my child dying inside me, and she was painting herself as the victim?
"I think," Marcus said, his tone measured, "that an apology from you would help Elena's recovery significantly."
"An apology?" The word felt like glass in my mouth. "You want me to apologize to her?"
"For the trauma you caused," Marcus clarified, as if explaining something simple to a child. "Your emotional outburst in the corridor—"
"Get out." My voice was low, dangerous. "Get out of my room right now."
Elena's face crumpled dramatically. She buried her face in Marcus's chest, her shoulders heaving with silent sobs.
Marcus's expression hardened. "This is unacceptable, Jessica. If you can't control yourself, I'll have to take measures for your own good."
He stepped into the hallway, and I heard him speaking quietly to someone. Minutes later, two security guards entered my room.
"Mrs. Whitfield," one said gently, "your husband has arranged for you to be moved to a more appropriate space for your recovery."
"I'm not going anywhere," I protested, but my body was too weak to resist as they helped me into a wheelchair.
Marcus walked beside us down the corridor, speaking in that same detached tone. "The basement office at home has been prepared for your mental health recovery. It's quiet, private, and you won't be disturbed there."
Locked away. That's what he meant. I was being locked away.
* * *
The basement office was cold and dimly lit, with one small window high on the wall that let in a rectangle of gray Seattle light. My phone was gone. My handbag had disappeared. The door had been locked from the outside.
I was a prisoner in my own home.
The only items left for me were a sketchbook and a set of colored pencils on the desk—tools I'd once used to draft jewelry designs before I'd set aside my dreams to support Marcus's career.
With trembling hands, I began to draw. The familiar motion was soothing, even as tears blurred my vision. I sketched the pendant my grandmother had left me—a vintage diamond piece that was my most treasured possession, currently locked in my jewelry box upstairs.
The scratch of pencil on paper was the only sound until the door unlocked with a sharp click. Elena slipped inside, closing the door behind her.
"Jessica," she said, her voice different now—harder, without the breathy vulnerability she displayed around Marcus. "I brought you some water."
She set a glass on the desk, then suddenly gasped, clutching her chest. Her breathing accelerated, and she staggered backward, knocking into the desk. My sketches scattered across the floor as she flailed her arms wildly.
"No, please," I said, lunging forward to steady her, to stop her from—
Too late. Her hand caught the chain of my grandmother's necklace—which she must have taken from my jewelry box—sending it flying across the room. It hit the concrete floor with a sickening crack, the vintage setting shattering on impact.
Elena collapsed into a chair, tears streaming down her face as she fought for breath. "I'm so sorry," she gasped between sobs. "My anxiety—I couldn't control it—"
I stared at the broken pieces of my heirloom scattered across the floor, the diamonds catching the dim light like tears. In that moment, I realized that the necklace wasn't the only thing that had been irreparably shattered.
My marriage, my trust, my future—all of it lay broken at my feet, destroyed by the hands of the people who were supposed to protect me most.
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