
Husband's Manipulative Games
Chapter 3
The shattered pieces of my grandmother's necklace felt cold and jagged against my palm as I climbed the stairs from my basement prison. Each step sent pain shooting through my body—not just from the physical trauma of losing our child, but from the weight of the truth I could no longer deny.
I found Marcus in our living room, scrolling through his phone with casual indifference. Elena was nowhere to be seen, but her presence lingered in the air like a sickening perfume.
"What happened to 'for better or worse'?" I asked, my voice barely above a whisper as I held out my hand, displaying the broken heirloom.
Marcus looked up, his expression shifting from annoyance to clinical detachment in an instant. He set his phone down and steepled his fingers—the same gesture he used when diagnosing patients.
"Jessica, you're clearly unstable right now," he said, his tone measured and patronizing. "This is textbook postpartum depression, possibly complicated by grief-induced psychosis. Your emotional volatility is concerning."
"My necklace is destroyed, Marcus. The only thing I had left from my grandmother." I closed my fingers around the broken pieces, feeling them bite into my skin. "Elena took it from our bedroom and deliberately—"
"Elena suffers from a documented anxiety disorder," he cut me off sharply. "What you're describing is a paranoid delusion. She was trying to bring you comfort by sharing something precious to you, and her anxiety was triggered by your hostility."
I stared at him, searching for any flicker of the man I had married—the man who had once held me through the night when I cried about missing my grandmother. There was nothing there. Just cold, clinical assessment.
Marcus reached into his pocket and pulled out a small pill bottle. He shook two tablets into his palm and held them out to me.
"Take these. They'll help stabilize your mood."
I didn't move. "I want to go back to London," I said, the words tumbling out before I could stop them. "I want to restart my design career. I need... I need something that's mine again."
Something dark flashed across Marcus's face—a momentary crack in his composed facade. He closed the distance between us in two quick strides, his hand closing around my wrist with bruising force.
"Is that what this is about?" he snarled, his voice dropping to a dangerous whisper. "You're using our child's death as an excuse to sabotage my work? To abandon our life here?"
"Marcus, you're hurting me—"
"You want to talk about hurt?" He released my wrist and forced the pills into my hand. "Take these and go back downstairs. We'll discuss your 'career aspirations' when you're thinking clearly."
I swallowed the pills dry, knowing resistance would only escalate his anger. As I turned to leave, he added, "And Jessica? Don't come up here again without permission. Elena needs a calm environment for her recovery."
That night, I heard them moving around upstairs—hushed voices, the soft click of doors. When I tried the basement door at dawn, it wouldn't budge. By morning, all the smart locks had been changed. I was completely cut off.
* * *
Three days later, Marcus unlocked the basement door. "You have a visitor," he announced, his smile too bright, too rehearsed. "Sarah's here to see you."
My childhood friend Sarah followed him down the stairs, her eyes widening at the sight of my makeshift prison. Behind her, Elena hovered like a shadow.
"We thought a little tea party might lift your spirits," Elena said, her voice syrupy with false concern as she set down a tray. "Marcus says social interaction is important for your recovery."
Sarah sat beside me on the small couch, squeezing my hand when Marcus and Elena stepped away to prepare the tea.
"Jess, what's going on?" she whispered. "You look terrible."
"I need to get out of here," I whispered back. "He's keeping me locked up, Sarah. After the baby... after what happened..."
"I'm so sorry about the baby," Sarah said, her eyes filling with tears. "But Jess, maybe Marcus is right about you needing rest? You've been through a trauma—"
"No, you don't understand." I gripped her hand tighter. "I want to go back to London, to design again. I need to restart my life."
Sarah's face softened. "That sounds wonderful, actually. You were always so talented—"
A crash interrupted us. Elena had dropped her teacup, tea spreading across the floor like a dark stain. Her breathing came in rapid gasps as she clutched at her throat.
"I can't—I can't breathe," she choked out, her eyes fixed accusingly on me. "She's doing it again—making me feel attacked—"
"Jessica!" Marcus rushed to Elena's side, cradling her as she convulsed dramatically. "What did you say to upset her?"
"Nothing!" I protested. "We were just talking about London—"
"You see what you've done?" Marcus shouted, his face contorted with rage. "Sarah, I think you should leave. Jessica isn't well enough for visitors."
Sarah stood, confusion and fear evident on her face. "I'm sorry, I didn't mean to—"
"It's not your fault," Marcus assured her, his voice instantly gentle. "Jessica's condition makes her manipulative. She's trying to turn people against Elena and me."
I watched helplessly as Sarah was escorted out, her backward glance full of pity and doubt. The door closed behind her with a final click.
I was alone again, more isolated than ever. But as I stared at the tea spreading across the floor, something hardened inside me. If I was going to survive—if I was going to escape—I needed to be smarter than them. I needed to find a way out before the walls of this basement became my tomb.
You may also like





