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My Husband Imprisoned Me to Fund His Mistress’s Career Novel Cover

My Husband Imprisoned Me to Fund His Mistress’s Career

Day 1,826. The charcoal crumbled between my thumb and forefinger as I added the vertical slash to the concrete wall behind the water heater. Dust coated my skin, a dry, gray powder that matched the rest of my existence. Five years. Sixty months of silence, broken only by the hum of the ventilation system and the heavy thud of the deadbolt sliding home. My sanctuary. My prison. The heavy steel door at the top of the stairs groaned. I shoved the charcoal shard into the crack between the floor and the wall, wiping my hands on my oversized gray sweatpants. I didn't need a mirror to know I looked like a ghost—pale, thin, eyes too large for a face that hadn't felt direct sunlight since the accident.
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Chapter 2

The satin of the gown felt like a second skin, a suffocating layer of midnight blue designed to hide the bruises blooming across my ribs. Wyatt adjusted his cufflinks in the rearview mirror of the limousine, his reflection a portrait of serene malice. He reached over, his fingers cool against my bare shoulder. I forced my lungs to expand, fighting the urge to recoil.

"Remember the narrative, Tessa," he murmured, his thumb tracing the line of my collarbone. "Fragile. Recovering. Grateful."

Outside, the flashbulbs of the paparazzi popped like distant gunfire. This was the Metropolitan Charity Gala, the stage for Wyatt’s latest performance as the devoted husband nursing his troubled wife back to health. Five years of darkness, and now I was being paraded under the brightest lights in New York City.

"Smile," he commanded, the word dropping like a stone.

I plastered a brittle expression onto my face as the door opened. The noise hit me first—a wall of chatter and camera shutters. Wyatt gripped my elbow, his fingers digging into the tender flesh just above the nerve. Pain was his way of steering.

We moved through the ballroom, a shark gliding through a reef of sequins and tuxedos. I kept my eyes low, afraid that if I looked too closely at anyone, I would scream for help and shatter the illusion. But then I saw it.

The centerpiece of the room wasn't the ice sculpture or the orchestra. It was her.

Haley stood by the champagne tower, laughing with a group of investors. Around her neck sat the *Celestial Tear*—a diamond and sapphire choker I had sketched on a napkin three months ago in the basement, weeping because the graphite had stained my fingers gray. She wore my agony like a trophy.

She saw us. Her smile widened, a predatory baring of teeth. She glided over, the gems at her throat catching the chandelier light in a dazzling mockery of my talent.

"Tessa!" Her voice was syrup laced with arsenic. "You look... stable."

Wyatt squeezed my arm. "She's having a good day, Haley. We're taking it one step at a time."

"Of course." Haley stepped closer, invading my personal space. She held a glass of red wine in one hand, the liquid swirling dangerously near the hem of my borrowed gown. "I was just telling everyone about the inspiration for this piece. Such a labor of love."

My hands clenched at my sides. "It's beautiful," I managed to choke out. The lie tasted like bile.

"Oh, oops!"

The glass tilted. It wasn't an accident. I saw the calculated flick of her wrist, the precise angle of the pour. The dark red liquid splashed across my chest, soaking into the blue satin, looking for all the world like a fresh, gaping wound.

Gasps rippled through the nearby crowd. Haley covered her mouth with a hand that trembled with suppressed laughter. "Oh my god, Tessa! I am so clumsy. Let me help you—"

She reached for her clutch, but instead of a napkin, her hand brushed against my evening bag. It was a lightning-fast movement, a sleight of hand worthy of a magician. I felt the weight of my purse shift.

"Haley, please," Wyatt said, his voice tight with feigned embarrassment. "It's fine."

"No, it's not fine!" Haley’s voice pitched up, drawing every eye in the room. "My bracelet! My mother's vintage pearl bracelet! It was right here on the table a second ago!"

The air left the room. Silence descended, heavy and judging. Haley turned her wide, accusatory eyes toward me.

"Tessa... you were standing right next to it."

"I didn't touch it," I whispered, my heart hammering against my ribs like a trapped bird.

"She has a problem, doesn't she, Wyatt?" Haley cried, playing to the crowd. "You told me she steals things when she's having an episode!"

A security guard stepped forward. "Ma'am, may I check your bag?"

I looked at Wyatt. He offered no defense, only a sad, resigned nod. "Let him look, Tessa. Show them you're innocent."

My hands shook as I handed over the small clutch. The guard opened it. From the depths, he pulled out a string of pearls. My mother's pearls. The only heirloom I had left, the one Haley had sworn was lost in the fire years ago.

The room spun. The whispers started, a hive of condemnation. *Kleptomaniac. Unstable. Poor Wyatt.*

"I'm so sorry," Wyatt announced to the room, his voice breaking perfectly. "She's not herself. We're leaving."

He dragged me out the back exit, his grip no longer steering but crushing. The moment the heavy metal doors of the service entrance closed behind us, the mask dropped. His face twisted into a snarl.

The back of his hand connected with my cheekbone—a sharp, stinging crack that echoed in the alleyway. I stumbled back against the brick wall, tasting blood.

"You embarrassed us," he hissed, looming over me. "After everything I've done to protect you."

"She planted it!" I cried, clutching my cheek. "That was Mom's bracelet!"

"It's Haley's now," he spat. He grabbed my jaw, forcing me to look at him. His eyes were devoid of humanity. "This behavior proves you aren't well, Tessa. You're hysterical. Dangerous. We can't have you passing this... sickness... on to the next generation."

A cold dread, deeper than the basement chill, settled in my stomach. "What are you talking about?"

"A permanent solution," he whispered. "To ensure you never bring shame to the Williams name again."

***

The ceiling was white. Blindingly, clinically white.

I blinked, my eyelids feeling like sandpaper. The smell of antiseptic burned my nose. My body felt heavy, anchored to the bed by invisible weights. A dull, throbbing ache radiated from my lower abdomen, a hollow fire that pulsed with every beat of my heart.

"She's awake," a voice said. Dr. Blackwood. I recognized the oily sheen of his voice from the few times he'd visited the basement to stitch me up.

Wyatt stepped into my line of sight. He looked fresh, rested. He took my hand, his thumb stroking my knuckles with a tenderness that made my skin crawl.

"Where am I?" My voice was a croak.

"You're safe, darling," Wyatt said softly. "Dr. Blackwood took excellent care of you."

I tried to sit up, but a sharp agony tore through my midsection. I gasped, falling back against the pillows. My hand flew to my stomach beneath the thin hospital gown. Bandages. Thick layers of gauze.

"There were complications," Dr. Blackwood said, not meeting my eyes. He was scribbling on a chart. "Given your genetic history of hysteria and the uterine instability... it was the only option."

"What did you do?" I whispered. The room began to tilt.

Wyatt leaned in close, his breath warm against my ear. "We removed the problem, Tessa. A total hysterectomy."

The words didn't make sense. They were sounds, not reality. But then the emptiness inside me screamed. The hollow ache wasn't just physical. It was an erasure.

"You... you took..."

"No children," Wyatt said, his voice soothing, reasonable. "No distractions. Just you and me, forever. I did this for us, Tessa. I saved you from passing on your defective genes."

A scream built in my chest, a primal, jagged thing that tore through my throat. It wasn't a sound of anger; it was the sound of a soul being gutted. I thrashed against the restraints I hadn't realized were there, the monitors screaming in panic alongside me.

Wyatt just watched, a small, satisfied smile playing on his lips as the darkness of the sedation dragged me back down. He had taken my freedom, my art, and now, my future. He had hollowed me out, leaving nothing but a shell for him to inhabit.

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