
After My Husband’s Niece Murdered Our Daughter, He Protected Her
Chapter 2
The flashbulbs were a stroboscopic assault, turning the charity gala into a disjointed nightmare of diamonds and forced smiles. I stood by Hugo’s side, a prop in his rehabilitation campaign, my waist bruising under the possessive clamp of his fingers.
Then I saw her.
Quinn stood near the ice sculpture, holding court with the city’s elite. She was wearing emerald silk chiffon—a dress I had bought in Milan two years ago, a dress that was currently hanging in the back of my closet. Or so I had thought. Seeing the fabric drape over the body of the woman who had murdered my daughter made bile rise in my throat.
"Smile, Violet," Hugo murmured, his lips barely moving. "The press is watching."
A reporter with hungry eyes thrust a microphone toward us. "Mr. McDonald, Mrs. McDonald—there have been rumors about a tragedy in the family. An infant death?"
Hugo’s grip tightened, grinding my hip bone. This was the script. The price of my parents' home.
"It was SIDS," I said, the lie tasting like ash. My voice was hollow, unrecognizable to my own ears. "A tragic accident. We ask for privacy."
Across the room, Quinn caught my eye. She didn't look away. Instead, she raised her champagne flute in a subtle toast, her lips forming a silent, mocking *I’m sorry*. There was no remorse in her gaze, only the glint of a predator playing with its food. The room spun. I wasn't just grieving; I was being erased.
***
The silence of the limousine ride home curdled into rage the moment the front door clicked shut. I didn't wait for him to take off his coat.
"She was wearing my clothes, Hugo. You let her raid my closet like she didn't just kill your daughter."
Hugo turned, his face a mask of exhaustion. "She didn't have anything formal. It’s just fabric, Violet. Don't be petty."
"Petty?" The scream tore from my chest, raw and jagged. "She threw Daisy off a balcony! And you’re parading her around like a debutante because you owe her father a debt? You are sacrificing your wife and your dead child for a ghost, Hugo!"
"Keep your voice down."
"No! I am done being quiet. You love that dead man more than you ever loved us."
The door to the guest wing creaked open. Quinn stood there, clutching the doorframe, her breathing theatrically shallow. "Hugo? Is she... is she going to hurt me?"
The act was so transparent, so vile, that my vision went red. "You manipulative little bitch."
I lunged. I didn't know what I intended to do—slap her, shake her, tear the mask off her face—but I never reached her.
Hugo intercepted me with the force of a linebacker. He slammed into me, driving me back against the wall. His hand flew up to restrain me, pinning my head against the plaster. The movement was too fast, too violent.
Pain exploded across my left cheek. sharp and searing.
Hugo’s wedding band—the heavy platinum ring I had placed on his finger seven years ago—had raked across my skin like a knife. I gasped, the fight draining out of me as warm blood trickled down my jaw, dripping onto the collar of my gown.
Hugo froze, staring at the blood on his hand. For a second, horror flickered in his gray eyes.
"Hugo!" Quinn shrieked, collapsing to her knees, clutching her chest. "I can't breathe!"
The hesitation vanished. Hugo shoved me away, turning his back on my bleeding face to rush to her side. "I've got you, Quinn. Breathe with me. Just breathe."
I slid down the wall, pressing my hand to the open gash on my cheek, watching my husband cradle the monster.
***
Two hours later, I tried to run.
I didn't pack a bag. I just grabbed my keys and sprinted for the service gate, desperate to reach the police station, the FBI, anyone who wouldn't be bought by the McDonald fortune.
The floodlights blinded me before I even reached the perimeter. Two of Hugo’s private security detail stepped out of the shadows, blocking my path. They didn't speak; they just escorted me back to the main entrance where Hugo waited.
It was pouring—a freezing, relentless Seattle deluge that soaked through my clothes in seconds.
"I thought we had an agreement, Violet," Hugo said. He stood under the portico, dry and immaculate.
"I'm going to the police," I shivered, the adrenaline fading into terror.
"You’re not going anywhere until you learn that actions have consequences." He nodded to the guards. "Lock the doors. She stays out here until morning."
"Hugo, no. It’s freezing."
"Think about our agreement."
The heavy oak doors slammed shut. The deadbolt slid home with a sound like a gunshot.
I pounded on the wood until my knuckles bruised, screaming his name, but the house remained dark. The temperature was dropping. I huddled against the brickwork, but there was no shelter from the driving rain.
An hour in, the shivering became violent convulsions. But it was my knee—the one reconstructed after a skiing accident in college—that began to scream. The damp cold seeped into the joint, turning the titanium screws into icicles boring into my bone.
I tried to stand, to keep the blood moving, but my leg buckled. I collapsed onto the wet pavement, gasping as agony radiated up my thigh and down to my ankle. It wasn't just pain; it was a deep, grinding torture that felt permanent.
For six hours, I lay in the mud and the rain, my face throbbing from the cut, my knee burning with a fire that the ice couldn't douse. I watched the windows of my own home, waiting for a light, for mercy. None came.
By the time the bolts finally clicked open at dawn, I couldn't walk. I dragged myself across the threshold, hypothermic and broken, leaving a trail of water and blood on the marble foyer. Hugo wasn't there. He had already left for the office.
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