
My Husband Drugged Me to Protect His Mistress
Chapter 2
The ivy biting into my palms was real. The salt air, thick and briny, was real. But the scene unfolding on the limestone patio felt like a hallucination, a cruel projection of everything I had been told was lethal to my family.
I crept closer, the thick wall of hydrangeas offering a fragrant, suffocating cover. My heart hammered against my ribs, a trapped bird, but I forced my breathing to slow. I needed to hear them. I needed the auditory laceration to confirm what my eyes were refusing to process.
They were seated around a glass table laden with shellfish and sweating pitchers of iced tea. No blackout curtains. No silence. Just the clatter of silverware and the roar of the ocean.
“I hate going back there,” Finnley said, stabbing a shrimp with aggressive precision. “She always tries to hug me the second we walk in. She smells like… like a hospital toilet. It sticks in my nose for hours.”
I flinched as if he’d thrown the fork at me. My hands, still raw and red from the morning’s scour, throbbed in sympathy. I scrubbed them until they bled because I thought I was protecting him. I thought I was the contagion.
Poppy laughed, a sound like wind chimes in a gale—pretty, but signaling a storm. She reached over and smoothed Finnley’s hair, her fingers lingering where mine were forbidden to touch. “Don’t worry, darling. You’re safe here. We don’t have to smell the bleach or her desperation in the Hamptons.”
Dorian raised his glass, the condensation dripping onto his linen trousers. His face, usually drawn and pained in my presence, was flushed with the ruddy glow of health. “To a week of freedom,” he said, his voice rich and deep, devoid of the whisper he used at home. “To escaping the mood killer.”
“To freedom,” Poppy and Finnley echoed.
The glass clicked. The sound was a gavel bringing down a sentence.
I didn’t storm the patio. I didn’t scream. The hysteria I had lived with for years—the anxiety that made me boil towels and hold my breath—evaporated, replaced by a cold, hollow clarity. I wasn’t sick. My biology wasn’t a weapon. I was simply the punchline to a joke I hadn’t known was being told.
I backed away, step by silent step, until the gravel turned to asphalt. I got into my car, my movements mechanical. I didn’t cry on the drive home. Tears were for people who had hope to lose. I had none left.
When I pulled into the driveway of our sterile, silent house, I didn’t pack. Leaving now would be messy; it would be emotional. They would call me crazy, and the world would believe them. I needed leverage. I needed to be as cold as the bleach they hated so much.
Three days later, the front door opened.
“Jo?” Dorian’s voice was a rasp, a perfect performance of exhaustion. He stumbled in, wearing dark sunglasses, one hand massaging his temple. Finnley followed, dragging his feet, his head hanging low.
“The migraine started on the highway,” Dorian whispered, wincing as he looked at the hallway light. “It’s bad this time. The sensory overload… it was too much.”
Usually, this was my cue. I would rush forward, apologizing, guiding them to the dark room, hating myself for existing.
Instead, I stood at the top of the stairs. My hands hung at my sides. I hadn’t scrubbed them. I hadn’t soaked them in vinegar. They were just hands.
“I’ll close the blinds,” I said. My voice was flat. steady.
Dorian paused, sensing the shift in atmospheric pressure. He peered at me over the rim of his glasses, his eyes narrowing slightly before the mask of pain slipped back into place. “Thank you, honey. We just need rest.”
I watched them retreat into the shadows of the master bedroom, the door clicking shut. They were good. They were so good at being victims.
I waited until the house settled into the heavy rhythm of sleep. The grandfather clock in the hall ticked past 2:00 AM. I moved through the darkness like a ghost in my own home, bypassing the master bedroom and heading straight for Dorian’s study.
The room smelled of mahogany and the expensive cigars he claimed to have quit years ago. I didn’t turn on the light. The moonlight filtering through the sheer curtains was enough. I went to the bottom drawer of his desk, the one he kept locked. He thought I was too scatterbrained, too medicated to notice where he hid the key—taped beneath the velvet seat of his desk chair.
The lock clicked. The drawer slid open with a soft groan.
I bypassed the tax returns and the property deeds. I was looking for the bleed. You don’t live two lives without a paper trail.
I found it in a thick manila envelope tucked behind a stack of old portfolios. Bank statements from an account I didn’t have access to. I scanned the columns, the numbers blurring before snapping into focus.
*The Plaza Hotel. Tiffany & Co. Sagaponack Realty Trust.*
The withdrawals were massive. Monthly transfers labeled “Medical Consultation Fees” that matched the exact dates of my cycles. Tens of thousands of dollars, siphoned from our joint savings, funding the champagne and the pool and the laughter I had witnessed.
But it was the recipient of the transfers that made the air leave my lungs.
The account wasn't just in Poppy's name.
*Beneficiary: Poppy Phillips-Kennedy.*
I stared at the hyphen. It was a small, ink-black line, but it severed my life in two. Phillips-Kennedy. Not a mistress. Not a girlfriend.
I closed the folder. I didn't put the key back. I sat in the dark, the scent of stale cigar smoke wrapping around me, and finally, I began to plan.
You may also like





