
My Husband Drugged Me to Protect His Mistress
Chapter 3
The fluorescent lights of the City Clerk’s office hummed with a low, irritating frequency that burrowed straight into my molars. It was a sterile purgatory of linoleum and bureaucracy, the kind of place where dreams went to be filed in triplicate. I stood at the counter, my handbag clutched so tightly the leather creaked, waiting for the woman behind the glass to validate the end of my life.
“I’m sorry, Ms. Wright,” the clerk said, her brow furrowing as she tapped a manicured nail against her monitor. She didn’t look up. “I’ve run the search three times. There is no record of a marriage license filed for a Dorian Kennedy and Josephine Wright in this county. Or the state, for that matter.”
The air in the room seemed to thin. “That’s impossible,” I said, my voice steady despite the sudden vertigo tilting the floor beneath me. “We were married at the St. Regis. July 14th, 2010. We signed the papers in the vestry.”
She finally looked at me, her expression shifting from boredom to a pity that felt like a slap. She turned the screen slightly, shielding it from the prying eyes of the line behind me. “Honey, the ceremony is just a show. The paperwork is the law. And the only marriage license on file for a Dorian Kennedy is dated June 12th, 2010.”
A month before my wedding.
“Who is the spouse?” I asked, though the name was already screaming in my head.
She hesitated, then sighed. “Poppy Phillips.”
The silence that followed was deafening. I wasn't a wife. I wasn't even an ex-wife. I was a mistress who had unknowingly auditioned for the role of a spouse. The framed certificate hanging in our hallway, the one I dusted every Tuesday, was nothing more than a prop. A souvenir from a play where I was the only one who didn't know the lines.
I walked out of the building into the blinding noon sun. I didn’t vomit. I didn’t scream. I felt a cold, hard stone settle in my stomach where my heart used to be.
I had one more stop.
The private lab was tucked away in a medical park on the edge of the city, quiet and expensive. I handed over the ticket for the sample I’d dropped off that morning—a vial of the “vitamin water” Dorian prepared for me every day. *“For your iron, Jo,”* he would say, stirring the pink powder into the glass. *“To keep you balanced.”*
The toxicologist didn't smile when he handed me the report. “Ms. Wright, are you under the care of a psychiatrist?”
“Why?”
“Because the sample you provided contains high concentrations of benzodiazepines and a potent mood suppressant usually reserved for severe psychotic episodes. Taken daily, this cocktail would induce lethargy, confusion, and heightened suggestibility. It’s a chemical lobotomy.”
I stared at the paper. The jagged lines of the chemical breakdown looked like a map of my last twelve years. The fog. The inability to get out of bed. The feeling that I was constantly wading through invisible water. It wasn’t depression. It wasn’t trauma. It was poison.
I drove home with the windows down, letting the wind whip my hair into a frenzy. The house looked different when I pulled into the driveway. It wasn't a sanctuary; it was a crime scene.
Dorian was in the study, pouring a scotch. He looked up as I entered, his face arranging itself into a mask of weary concern. He adjusted his cufflinks—the onyx ones I’d bought him for our fifth “anniversary.”
“Jo? You’ve been gone for hours. I was about to call the police. You know how you get when you wander off.”
I didn’t answer. I walked to the desk and slammed the manila envelope of bank statements down on the mahogany. The sound was like a gunshot.
“Explain this,” I said. My voice was low, devoid of the trembling apology he was used to.
Dorian glanced at the papers, then back at me. He didn't flinch. He didn’t pale. He took a sip of his drink, the ice clinking softly against the crystal.
“You went through my desk,” he said, his tone disappointed, like a parent scolding a toddler. “I thought we talked about boundaries, Josephine.”
“Fifty thousand dollars a month to ‘Poppy Phillips-Kennedy,’” I said, pointing a shaking finger at the beneficiary line. I kept the marriage license secret, a blade hidden up my sleeve. “You’re funding her life with our savings while I scrub floors until my hands bleed.”
Dorian set the glass down. He walked around the desk, closing the distance between us. He loomed, not with physical aggression, but with the suffocating weight of his authority.
“Poppy handles the estate finances because you are incapable, Jo,” he said softly. “Look at you. You’re hysterical. You’re paranoid. You think everyone is out to get you because your brain is broken.”
“My brain is fine,” I snapped, the knowledge of the drugs burning in my pocket. “It’s the lies that are making me sick.”
He sighed, rubbing his temples as if I were a headache he couldn't shake. “I’m doing this for us. Poppy is family. She helps us because you can’t. But if you’re going to be like this... if you’re going to spy and accuse...”
He leaned in, his voice dropping to a whisper that chilled my blood.
“Maybe Dr. Mitchell is right. Maybe outpatient therapy isn’t enough anymore. If you continue this delusion, Jo, I will have you institutionalized. For your own safety.”
He reached out and tucked a strand of hair behind my ear. His touch was cold.
“Go upstairs. Take your vitamins. Sleep it off.”
I stood frozen as he turned his back on me, dismissing me like a servant. He thought he had won. He thought I was the same broken doll he’d been playing with for a decade.
But as I walked out of the study, I didn’t go upstairs. I went to the kitchen, poured the pink water down the sink, and watched the drain swallow the only thing that had kept me compliant.
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