
My Husband Let His Mistress Kill Our Child
Chapter 3
The concrete floor scraped against my knees as Carter dragged me into the center of the room. The single bulb overhead cast harsh shadows across his face, making him look like a stranger wearing my husband's skin. In one hand, he held a small cast-iron brand. The end of it glowed orange in the dim light, the symbol at its tip unreadable to me but clearly meaningful to him.
"This is the final step, Lilah," he whispered, his breath reeking of whiskey. His eyes were bloodshot, darting back and forth like a cornered animal's. "Sasha says the darkness is still clinging to you. To your kidney. *My* kidney. We have to burn it out."
I tried to crawl backward, but my limbs wouldn't cooperate. The ice baths had left me weak, my muscles spasming with the slightest movement. "Carter, please," I begged, my voice a threadbare whisper. "You gave me that kidney to save my life. Not to torture me."
He shook his head violently, as if trying to dislodge a fly. "You don't understand. The baby's death... it's proof. The vessel was poisoned. We have to purify it." He was chanting now, the words slurring together in a grotesque prayer. "*Purity is pain. Pain is truth. Truth is freedom.*"
Sasha appeared in the doorway, her white robes billowing around her like smoke. She didn't enter. She just watched, her face serene, as Carter advanced on me. The brand in his hand trembled, the heat making the air above it warp and dance.
"Hold her," he commanded.
She moved then, her steps silent on the concrete. Her hands, cold and dry, pinned my shoulders to the floor. I thrashed, but it was like fighting shadows. Carter knelt behind me, his knees digging into my thighs. I felt the heat before I felt the pain—a wave of scorching air that made the fine hairs on my lower back curl and crisp.
The iron touched my skin. The sizzle of flesh was deafening in the small room. My scream tore through the penthouse, echoing off the concrete walls, but no one came. No one was there to hear. The pain was blinding, white-hot, all-consuming. It burned away the last thread of love I had for the man I married.
I blacked out.
When I came to, I was alone on the mattress. The brand on my back was a throbbing, pulsing thing—a second heart beating in time with my own. I didn't need to see it to know it was a mark I would carry forever, a scarlet letter burned into my skin.
Days passed. The penthouse grew quieter. Sasha was hosting one of her "meditation circles" in the living room—a collection of wealthy, lost souls seeking enlightenment through her poisoned tea. I could hear their murmured chants, the soft clink of crystal jewelry as she moved among them.
Carter was locked in his study, drinking himself into oblivion. The lock on my door clicked shut after he left, but it was a simple mechanism. I'd spent years as a model, traveling with jewelry and cash. I knew how to work a basic lock.
I tore a length of wire from the springs of the thin mattress. My hands shook, but the movements were muscle memory. The lock gave way with a soft snick. I crept into the hallway, my bare feet silent on the cold marble.
Sasha's suite was at the end of the penthouse, a room she'd claimed as her own. The door was unlocked—she never expected me to leave my cell. Inside, the space was a jarring mix of luxury and spartanism. Silk sheets on a narrow bed. A laptop on a minimalist desk. And a bottle of prescription painkillers on the nightstand.
I reached for the bottle, but a glint of metal caught my eye. Behind the laptop was a small burner phone, its plastic case black and cheap against the polished wood of the desk. Next to it, a stack of cash—hundreds, bound with rubber bands.
My heart hammered against my ribs. I grabbed the phone, my fingers clumsy with fear. As I turned to leave, I heard the soft pad of footsteps in the hallway.
I dove into the closet, pulling the door shut just as Sasha entered. Through the crack, I watched her pick up the phone I'd found, her face twisted with irritation.
"It's done," she snapped into the receiver. "The Thomas brat was healthy as a horse, but I made sure he didn't last long. The husband's completely broken now. It won't be long before I'm the future Mrs. Thomas and we can move on to the next mark."
She laughed—a sound like breaking glass. "Was it easy? Darling, it was like taking candy from a baby. They're all so desperate to believe. So desperate to be saved."
I pressed my hand against my mouth, stifling the sob that threatened to escape. My finger hovered over the record button on the stolen phone. With trembling hands, I pressed it down.
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