
My Best Friend Helped My Husband Commit Me to an Asylum
My Best Friend Helped My Husband Commit Me to an Asylum Chapter 1
I always used the lemon oil on the mahogany desk. Maddox claimed the scent grounded him when the phantom pains in his 'useless' legs flared up. For five years, I had rubbed that oil into the heavy grain of the wood. For five years, I had been the saintly, self-sacrificing wife of the tragically paralyzed Maddox Hawkins, trading my twenties and my career for a life of sponge baths, physical therapy schedules, and quiet, suffocating pity.
Today, the rag caught on a hairline fracture beneath the center drawer. A sharp, metallic *snick* broke the absolute silence of the penthouse study.
A false bottom dropped heavily onto my lap.
I froze, the lemon-scented rag slipping from my fingers. Inside the shallow, hidden compartment lay a single, black leather-bound diary. The leather was worn at the edges, handled often. I opened it, my eyes tracing the sharp, cramped handwriting I knew as intimately as my own reflection.
*May 12th. Kiara says the trust will be fully accessible once the commitment papers go through. The Bishop fortune is practically ours.*
The air in the study suddenly felt too thin to breathe. Kiara. My maid of honor. My best friend. My hands began to shake, rattling the thick parchment as I flipped the pages backward.
*August 3rd. Dr. Vance agreed to the involuntary hold. Eve is too 'unstable' since the miscarriage. The grieving wife narrative is perfect. The wheelchair was a stroke of genius. She never questions a man who can't walk.*
The words blurred. A violent cold crept up my spine, paralyzing my vocal cords. He wasn't paralyzed. The titanium wheelchair, the bedside commode, the agonizingly slow transfers from bed to bath—a performance. A five-year, meticulously crafted long con to drain my family's wealth and lock me in a psychiatric ward.
I stood up. The penthouse, with its fifteen-million-dollar views of the Manhattan skyline, suddenly felt like a beautifully gilded mausoleum. The plush hallway runner muffled my footsteps as I moved toward Maddox's private bedroom.
A sound stopped me dead in my tracks. Laughter. Deep, resonant, and effortless. It wasn't the weak, pitiful chuckle he reserved for our high-society guests.
I approached the heavy oak door, pushing it open just a fraction of an inch.
The breath punched out of my lungs.
Maddox was pacing. *Pacing.*
His bare feet slapped against the Brazilian walnut floors with a heavy, able-bodied rhythm. He was six-foot-two, a towering, physically imposing height I hadn't seen upright since the crumpled metal of his sports car was towed away five years ago. He moved with the fluid grace of a predator, holding a crisp sheet of paper in one hand while staring at his laptop on the dresser.
The screen cast a sickly blue glow over his face. Kiara's voice drifted from the speakers, a silvery, familiar giggle that made the bile rise in my throat. "Is the saint asleep?"
Maddox smirked, waving the paper at the camera. "Out cold. And Vance signed the evaluation. The grieving, delusional wife narrative is fully documented. By Friday, she'll be in a padded room, and we'll be in St. Barts."
A violent tremor seized my hand. My knuckles struck the doorframe. A dull, hollow *thwack*.
Maddox froze. His eyes darted to the crack in the door. He didn't scramble for the titanium wheelchair sitting empty and mocking in the corner. He didn't feign a fall. Instead, he calmly reached out, clicked the laptop shut, and walked toward me.
He pulled the door wide open.
I had to tilt my head back to meet his gaze. The sudden shift in gravity, the sheer physical reality of him looming over me, made the room spin.
"You're standing," I whispered. The words tasted like ash.
He looked down at me, the charming, tragic mask melting away to reveal something entirely reptilian. "And you're snooping."
"Five years, Maddox. I fed you. I bathed you." My voice didn't rise; it dropped, sharpening into a blade. The heat in my chest was beginning to thaw the ice in my veins. "Kiara?"
He leaned against the doorframe, casually crossing his perfectly functional legs. The arrogance radiated off him in suffocating waves. "She has expensive tastes, Evie. And your family's trust fund has been sitting there, just waiting for someone with the vision to use it."
"I'll destroy you," I breathed, my fingernails biting half-moons into my palms. "I'll tell everyone."
Maddox laughed, a dry, scraping sound. He tapped the forged psychiatric evaluation against his palm. "Tell who? The board? The press?"
He reached out, hooking a finger under my chin. His grip was bruising, a physical reminder of the power he had hidden for half a decade. I refused to flinch.
"Look at yourself, Eve," he murmured, his eyes alight with sadistic glee. "Who are they going to believe? The brave, tragically paralyzed husband who survived a horrific crash... or the stressed, grieving, emotionally unstable wife who finally cracked under the pressure?"
He released my chin, his smirk carving deep into his cheeks. "Pack a bag, sweetheart. The men in white coats are coming tomorrow."
He turned his back on me, walking toward his bed. He thought he had won. He thought I was broken. But as I stared at the broad back of the man I had given my youth to, the devoted housewife died. Something else—something cold, precise, and utterly ruthless—took her first breath.
My Best Friend Helped My Husband Commit Me to an Asylum of Contents
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