
Marriage, Lies, and Vengeance
Chapter 3
The parking garage beneath my physical therapy clinic felt colder than usual as I stepped out of the elevator. My prosthetic hand ached from today's session—Marcus had been pushing me harder lately, insisting that strength was the key to independence. I'd just reached for my car keys when the first warning sign appeared: footsteps that didn't match the garage's empty atmosphere.
"Ms. Ross?" A man's voice echoed between concrete pillars. "We need you to come with us."
I spun around, my heart hammering against my ribs. Three men in dark clothes approached with practiced precision—their movements too coordinated for casual attackers.
"I'm not going anywhere," I said, backing toward my car. My left hand fumbled with the keys as I tried to unlock the door.
The tallest man moved with surprising speed, catching my wrist before I could escape. "Don't make this difficult," he said, his voice almost gentle. "Ms. Bailey is waiting."
Gwen. Of course.
A cloth bag descended over my head before I could scream. Strong hands lifted me, carrying me toward what felt like a service exit. I kicked and struggled, but my prosthetic hand offered little resistance as they bundled me into what smelled like an unmarked van.
"Please," I gasped as the bag was yanked off my head. "Whatever she's paying you, I can double it."
The man driving—bald with a scar across his jaw—glanced at me in the rearview mirror. "Not about money, lady. Professional courtesy."
The warehouse district outside the city limits looked abandoned through the tinted windows. When they finally stopped, my legs nearly gave out as they pulled me from the van. The air smelled of rust and damp concrete, the kind of place where screams would go unheard.
Gwen waited inside, perched on a metal folding chair like she was attending a garden party. Her blonde hair gleamed under the industrial lights, and she wore a cream-colored dress that looked obscenely pristine against the warehouse's grim backdrop.
"Hello, Nyla." Her smile was razor-sharp. "Comfortable?"
"Let me go," I said, trying to keep my voice steady despite the fear crawling up my throat. "This is kidnapping."
"Oh, I'm not keeping you long." Gwen gestured to a camera setup. "Just long enough to get what I need."
One of the men forced me into a chair across from her. Another positioned lights while the third operated the camera. My prosthetic hand throbbed as I struggled against the zip ties binding my wrists.
"We're recording now," Gwen said brightly. "So let's begin. Tell us about your... creative process."
"I don't know what you mean."
Gwen's smile never wavered as she nodded to someone behind me. Suddenly, a screen flickered to life, showing footage of Spencer—my Spencer—speaking directly to the camera.
"Nyla is... complicated," his recorded voice said. "She tries so hard, but she'll never be what I need."
My stomach twisted as Gwen fast-forwarded through clips—Spencer talking about our marriage, our problems, his frustrations with me. Each word was a knife twist.
"Seven years," Gwen said softly. "Seven years I've been watching you try to be enough for him."
She clicked to another video—this one showing Spencer and her together, his hands gentle on her face in ways they'd never been with me.
"Do you know why you lost your hand?" Gwen leaned forward, eyes glittering. "That car accident wasn't an accident at all."
The world tilted beneath me. "What?"
"I arranged it." She examined her manicure casually. "Needed you weakened, distracted. It worked perfectly—you were so focused on learning to use that." She gestured dismissively at my prosthetic. "You never noticed me taking your designs."
"You stole my work?" The pieces clicked into place—the sudden success of Gwen's jewelry line, the designs that matched mine but always reached market first.
"Stole? Such an ugly word." Gwen shrugged. "I simply... borrowed what you created. Spencer always loved my taste, after all."
She clicked again, and the screen showed news reports about the plagiarism accusations—my face splashed across entertainment websites with headlines calling me a fraud.
"This is just the beginning," Gwen said, leaning closer. "By tomorrow, everyone will know you're mentally unstable too. Spencer and I have been gathering evidence for months—erratic behavior, paranoia, even some... concerning medication prescriptions."
My blood ran cold as I realized her plan. "You're going to have me committed?"
"It's for your own good." Gwen's voice dripped false concern. "You're clearly not well, Nyla. And once you're safely away in treatment, Spencer and I can finally move forward without... complications."
The camera's red light blinked steadily as I stared at the woman who had orchestrated my destruction with such meticulous precision.
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