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My Husband Faked Illness to Keep Me Prisoner Novel Cover

My Husband Faked Illness to Keep Me Prisoner

The alarm blared at 4:00 AM, jolting me from the few precious hours of sleep I'd managed. I silenced it quickly, not wanting the sound to carry down the hallway to Evan's room. He needed his rest—or so I thought. I padded barefoot across the cold marble floor of the Porter penthouse kitchen, my fingers automatically reaching for the light switch. The sterile, high-tech kitchen gleamed under the sudden brightness—all stainless steel and polished granite, designed for a chef who never cooked. Except me, of course. "Twenty-seven layers," I whispered to myself, pulling out the ingredients. "Butter at exactly 62 degrees." My hands moved with practiced precision as I began kneading the dough. The scars on my palms—tiny cuts from years of careless handling of sharp tools—tingled slightly as they always did when I worked. I'd learned to ignore the pain.
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Chapter 2

I lunged for the elevator, my heart hammering against my ribs. The penthouse suddenly felt like a prison, its luxury trappings now seeming like gilded bars. My fingers trembled as I swiped my key card—the same one I'd used for ten years without issue.

The light flashed red. Denied.

"Looking for this?" Evan's voice came from behind me, deceptively soft. He held up my card between two fingers. "I had your access revoked this morning. Right after you brought me breakfast."

I spun to face him. "You knew I was leaving?"

"I know everything about you, Hazel." His smile didn't reach his eyes. "Every little habit. Every secret thought. You're transparent to me."

The elevator doors opened, revealing two men in dark suits. Their earpieces and watchful expressions made their true function obvious.

"These aren't nurses," Evan said, following my gaze. "They're security. They've been watching you for years."

One of them—the taller one with the scar—stepped forward. "Ms. Scott, Mr. Porter requests your presence at dinner."

"Requests?" Evan laughed, the sound sharp and cruel. "No, that's not a request."

---

Dinner was a nightmare of normalcy. The dining room gleamed under chandelier light, the table set for two. Evan pulled out my chair—a parody of gentlemanly behavior—before taking his own seat at the head of the table.

"Wine?" he asked, holding up a bottle of Bordeaux.

I shook my head, unable to trust my voice.

"Your loss." He poured himself a glass, swirling it with practiced elegance. "I thought we could discuss your... career change."

"I'm not changing careers. I'm leaving."

"No." He cut into his steak with surgical precision. "You're not."

I watched in horrified fascination as he ate—chewing, swallowing, using utensils with perfect dexterity. No tremors. No weakness. The man who had needed me to feed him breakfast was now devouring a rare steak without assistance.

"You've been lying to me," I whispered.

"I've been testing you." He dabbed his lips with a napkin. "And you've been such a devoted little nurse. So loyal." His eyes gleamed with something that made my skin crawl. "I've never had anyone so completely devoted before. It's... intoxicating."

---

Later that evening, Evan was locked in a video conference with Porter Enterprises executives. I slipped into his study—a room I was still forbidden to enter alone—and spotted his tablet on the desk.

It wasn't locked.

My fingers hovered over the screen, trembling. This was wrong. This was invasive. But after ten years of lies...

I tapped the screen and found a folder labeled "Assets."

Inside were dozens of subfolders. Financial records. Property deeds. And then—

"Hazel Scott."

My own name stared back at me. I opened the folder and found hundreds of photos. Me sleeping. Me baking in the kitchen. Me crying outside his bedroom door during one of his "comas."

But it was the other folders that made my blood freeze.

"Ivanna Flores."

"Madison Pierce."

"Tatiana Volkov."

Each contained intimate photos of Evan with different women. Timestamps showed they were taken during his supposed medical crises—while I was frantically searching for doctors, while I was praying at his bedside.

One photo showed Evan and a stunning brunette in Aspen—the same weekend I'd nearly frozen to death getting his "medication."

---

"You look beautiful tonight," Evan murmured, adjusting the collar of my black dress. "My nurse is the prettiest in Manhattan."

I said nothing as he guided me through the private entrance of the Porter Tower gala. The "nurse" comment was deliberate—a reminder of my place in his twisted game.

"Security will bring her to the VIP room," he told someone over his phone. "I want privacy for this conversation."

"Who?" I asked.

"An uninvited guest." His smile was cold. "Someone who needs to understand the consequences of corporate espionage."

The VIP room was dimly lit, with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the city. A young woman sat in a chair, her designer dress torn at the shoulder, her makeup smeared with tears.

"Please," she begged as Evan entered. "I have children. They'll suffer if—"

"If what?" Evan circled her like a predator. "If I release these photos of you with Senator Collins? Or these bank statements showing the money trail from his campaign fund to your offshore account?"

The woman's face drained of color.

"Or perhaps these text messages about your husband's 'business trips'?" Evan continued, his voice clinical as he dismantled her life piece by piece. "Your daughter's private school fees paid from the same account that funded your little shopping trips to Paris?"

I watched in horror as he systematically destroyed her, using intimate details as weapons. This wasn't just cruelty—it was something worse. Something inhuman.

And as I stood there, frozen in place, I realized with sickening clarity that if I didn't escape soon, I would be next.

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