
My Husband Drugged Me to Protect His Mistress
Chapter 5
The scrape of the key in the lock was the loudest sound I had heard in seventy-two hours.
I didn't scramble to the door. I didn't beg. Instead, I let my body go limp on the filthy mattress, arranging my limbs in a sprawl of absolute, terrifying stillness. My breath was shallow, barely lifting my ribs. If Hudson wanted a broken doll, I would give him a corpse.
The heavy steel door groaned open. A slice of yellow hallway light cut through the gloom, burning my dilated pupils, but I didn't flinch.
"Mrs. Knight?" The voice was young. The new maid.
She took a hesitant step inside, the china on her tray rattling against the silver. "Sir said to bring water. Mrs. Knight?"
Silence. I held the air in my lungs until they burned.
She stepped closer, her shadow falling over me. "Oh god. Ma'am?"
The tray hit the concrete with a deafening crash. Glass shattered, sending water pooling toward my cheek. As she dropped to her knees, reaching for a pulse, I moved.
I coiled upward, my movements fueled by three days of darkness and rage. I shoved her hard against the wall. She gasped, eyes wide with shock, but before she could scream, I was already through the door.
I didn't look back. I sprinted through the wine cellar, up the service stairs, and burst out the side entrance into a wall of water.
The storm was biblical. Rain lashed against my skin like freezing needles, soaking my torn silk blouse in seconds. The wind howled, drowning out any alarm that might have been raised behind me. I didn't stop running until the iron gates of the estate were a blur in the rearview of my memory, my bare feet bleeding on the asphalt, my lungs screaming for oxygen.
***
The sterile scent of antiseptic was the first thing that pulled me back from the edge of unconsciousness.
I was sitting on a crinkling paper sheet in a private clinic on the Upper East Side, wrapped in a coarse wool blanket. The doctor, a grey-haired man with kind eyes who had treated the Evans family for decades, was studying a chart with a furrowed brow.
"You're severely dehydrated, Eliza," Dr. Sterling said, his voice grave. "Bruising on your wrists, signs of hypothermia... and your blood pressure is dangerously low."
"I fell," I lied, my voice a raspy croak. "Just give me some fluids, Arthur. I need to go."
He sighed, closing the folder. He looked at me over the rim of his glasses, his expression shifting from concern to something heavier.
"We can treat the dehydration," he said softly. "But we need to be careful with the medication. Because of the pregnancy."
The room seemed to tilt. The hum of the air conditioner roared in my ears.
"What?" The word was barely a whisper.
"You're six weeks along, Eliza."
My hand flew to my stomach, pressing against the damp wool. A child. Hudson's child.
A nausea that had nothing to do with dehydration rolled over me. I closed my eyes, and for a second, I was back in the basement, listening to the creak of the bedboards above me. Listening to him create a life with *her* while he left me to rot.
"Eliza?" Dr. Sterling reached out, but I pulled away.
"He can never know," I said, the words hardening as they left my mouth.
"Eliza, if you're in trouble—"
"I'm not in trouble, Arthur," I interrupted, sliding off the table. My legs shook, but my spine was straight. "I'm finished. The woman who walked into this clinic... she doesn't exist anymore. Mrs. Knight is dead."
I would raise this child. But I would raise it as an Evans. Hudson had lost the right to be a father the moment he turned that key.
***
The Evans estate was a fortress of limestone and iron, a stark contrast to the prison I had just escaped. When the heavy mahogany doors of the library swung open, Chase was standing by the fireplace, a tumbler of whiskey in his hand.
He turned, and the glass shattered on the hearth.
"Eliza?"
He crossed the room in a blur, his impeccably tailored suit rustling as he caught me before I could collapse. His eyes swept over me—the bruised wrists, the hollow cheeks, the blood on my feet. The temperature in the room seemed to drop ten degrees.
"Who did this?" His voice was low, a terrifying growl that vibrated against my chest. "Was it him?"
I nodded against his shoulder, too exhausted to speak.
Chase gently guided me to the leather sofa, draping his jacket over my shivering shoulders. He stood up and walked to the window, staring out at the rain. Slowly, methodically, his hand went to his left cuff. He began to twist the silver link—once, twice.
It was the signal. The Evans family declaration of war.
"I will burn it all down," Chase said, his tone devoid of emotion, which made it all the more lethal. "I will bankrupt his company by morning. I will have him arrested, stripped of his assets, and left to rot in a cell darker than whatever hole he put you in. He won't just lose his fortune, Eliza. He will lose his life."
"No."
The single syllable cut through the air. Chase turned, his eyes narrowing in confusion.
I pulled the jacket tighter around me, the warmth finally seeping into my bones. I wasn't shivering anymore. The pen-tapping anxiety, the desperate need to please, the fear of abandonment—it had all been left in the basement.
"You won't touch him, Chase," I said, my voice steady and cold as steel. "He doesn't get the mercy of a quick execution from you."
I looked up at my brother, my eyes dry and clear.
"He's sick, Chase. Dying. And I'm the only one who holds the cure," I whispered, a dark satisfaction curling in my gut. "I want him to watch his empire crumble. I want him to know exactly who he threw away. And when he's on his knees, begging for his life... I want to be the one to look him in the eye and say no."
I stood up, shedding the last remnants of the victim.
"This is my revenge," I declared. "Let me take it."
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