
My Husband Let His Sister Ruin Our Marriage
Chapter 3
Time didn’t pass in the cellar; it rotted. For three days, the darkness was a physical weight, pressing against my chest until my lungs forgot the rhythm of breathing. The cold was worse. It started as a sharp bite, then dulled into a narcotic numbness that made me dream of fire. I hallucinated Ian’s voice, warm and apologetic, but when I reached out, my fingers only scraped against the rough, freezing stone.
Then came the light—blinding, violent. I heard a scream, but it wasn’t mine. My throat was too dry, like sandpaper rubbing against itself. It was Mrs. Gable, the housekeeper. Her terrified wail was the last thing I heard before the blackness reclaimed me.
I woke up to the rhythmic *beep-beep-beep* of a heart monitor. The hospital room was sterile, white, and offensively bright. I turned my head, the movement sending a spike of nausea through my skull. The chair beside my bed was empty.
"Mrs. Edwards?" A nurse bustled in, checking my IV drip. "You're awake. You were severely hypothermic and dehydrated."
"Ian," I rasped. The name tasted like ash. "Is he... outside?"
The nurse hesitated, her eyes darting to the chart in her hands. "Mr. Edwards isn't here. He called to ensure you have the best care, of course. But he said his sister... she was quite traumatized by the accident. apparently, she feels terrible about locking the door. He’s staying with her until she calms down."
The words hit me harder than the cold ever had. I lay back against the pillow, staring at the ceiling tiles. I had nearly frozen to death in my own home, and my husband was comforting the woman who put me there.
***
Three weeks later, I stood on the terrace of the Hamptons estate, gripping a flute of champagne I had no intention of drinking. The summer gala was in full swing. It was a kaleidoscope of silk, diamonds, and hollow laughter. I wore a gown of heavy, beaded emerald velvet—armor disguised as couture. It weighed twenty pounds, dragging at my shoulders, but I needed the weight to feel grounded.
Ian was across the pool, his back to me. He was speaking with a senator, but his body was angled toward Arielle, who sat on a lounge chair looking delicate in white chiffon. She was playing the recovering victim perfectly, receiving sympathies for the "terrible accident" with the cellar door.
I felt a presence at my elbow. Arielle had drifted over, silent as a ghost.
"You look tired, Blaire," she murmured, swirling her drink. "Maybe you should go lie down. Ian hates it when you look haggard in public."
I turned to her, my grip on the glass tightening until I feared the stem would snap. "Stay away from me, Arielle."
She stepped closer, invading my personal space. Her perfume—sweet, cloying lilies—filled my nose. She leaned in, her lips brushing my ear, intimate as a lover.
"You think you're safe because you survived the cold?" she whispered. "You have no idea what Ian is capable of covering up. His mother didn't fall down those stairs, Blaire. I pushed her."
My blood ran cold. I froze, my breath hitching in my throat. The world tilted on its axis. "What?"
Before I could process the confession, Arielle shrieked. It was a bloodcurdling sound, theatrical and piercing. She threw herself backward, her hand lashing out to grab my wrist.
"No! Blaire, stop!"
She yanked me with surprising strength. I stumbled, my heels catching on the stone. We went over the edge together.
The water was a shock of chlorine and noise. I went under immediately, the heavy velvet of my gown acting like an anchor. It soaked up the water instantly, dragging me down toward the mosaic tiles of the pool floor. I kicked, thrashing, but the fabric tangled around my legs. My lungs burned. Above me, the surface was a shimmering, distorted mirror of the night sky.
Through the chaos of bubbles, I saw a splash. A dark shape cut through the water. Ian.
Relief surged through me, so potent it was almost painful. He was coming. He had seen.
I reached up, my hand breaking the surface, gasping for air before the weight of the dress pulled me under again. I saw him clearly for a split second. His eyes were wide, focused with laser intensity.
But not on me.
He swam right past me. His shoulder brushed my outstretched arm as he stroked powerfully toward Arielle, who was merely treading water a few feet away, perfectly buoyant in her light chiffon.
I watched, suspended in the blue silence, as my husband wrapped his arm around the woman who had just confessed to murder. He kicked upward, hauling her to the surface, leaving me to the dark.
The water filled my mouth. My vision began to spot.
Suddenly, rough hands grabbed my waist. I was hauled up, coughing and retching, breaking the surface into the humid night air. A security guard dragged me to the poolside, dumping me onto the concrete like a sack of wet laundry.
I lay there, shivering violently, vomiting pool water onto the expensive stone. Through the stinging haze in my eyes, I looked up.
Ian was on his knees ten feet away. He had wrapped Arielle in a towel and was rocking her back and forth, pressing kisses to her hair while she sobbed into his chest. He didn't look at me once.
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